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2001 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 2001 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament began on March 16 and ended on April 1. The tournament featured 64 teams. The Final Four, held at the Savvis Center (now Scottrade Center) in St. Louis, consisted of Connecticut, Notre Dame, Purdue, and Southwest Missouri State (now Missouri State), with Notre Dame defeating Purdue 68–66 to win its first NCAA title.[1] Notre Dame's Ruth Riley was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.[2]

2001 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Teams64
Finals siteSavvis Center
St. Louis, Missouri
ChampionsNotre Dame Fighting Irish (1st title)
Runner-upPurdue Boilermakers (2nd title game)
Semifinalists
MOPRuth Riley (Notre Dame)

Notable events edit

With the Final Four held in the state of Missouri for the first time in NCAA history, 10th seeded University of Missouri rose to the occasion and upset 7th seeded Wisconsin in the first round. They then went on to play the 2nd seeded team from Georgia and won that game as well, advancing to the regional, where their bid to play in their home state ended in a loss to Louisiana Tech. Missouri State also did well. They were seeded 5th, so expected to win their first-round game, but they went on to upset 4th seed Rutgers to set up a game against the Regional's top seed, Duke. Missouri State upset Duke 81–71 to head to the regional final against Washington, who had upset both Florida and Oklahoma. The upsets came to an end as 5th seeded Missouri State beat 6th seeded Washington 104–87 to advance to the Final Four, and a chance to play in front of home state fans.

In the Mideast Regional, the top four seeds all advanced to the regional semifinal, then both higher seeds were upset. 4th seed Xavier knocked off the number one seed in the regional, Tennessee, by a score of 80–65. Third seeded Purdue played second seeded Texas Tech in a game that came down to the wire. Purdue won 74–72, then went on to defeat Xavier for the spot in the Final Four against Missouri State. The upset run by Missouri State came to an end in the semifinal, as Purdue beat them 81–64. The career of Jackie Stiles, who had scored 1,064 points during the season, the first player in NCAA Division I women's basketball history to score 1000 points in a season, came to an end.[3][4]

In the Midwest and East regionals, both number one seeds advanced to the Final Four. Both Notre Dame and Connecticut were from the Big East and met in the other semifinal. The two teams had met twice before in the season, with Notre Dame winning at their home and UConn beating Notre Dame in the Big East Championship. Early in the game, the prior year National Champion Connecticut looked to be on their way to another championship game. The Huskies led at one point by 16 points in the first half. In the second half, Notre Dame came back, and with just over twelve minutes left, took their first lead of the game. Connecticut went into a scoring drought, going more than five minutes without a point. Notre Dame went on to win 90–75, to head to their first national championship game.[5]

The championship game featured two teams from Indiana. Notre Dame began the game with a repeat of their performance against Connecticut, falling behind by double digits in the first half. The Irish were the best three-point shooting team in the country, but ended up hitting just one of ten attempts. Purdue's Katie Douglas scored 18 points for Purdue, with her final points being a three-pointer to put the Boilermakers in front 66–64 with a little over one minute left in the game. Notre Dame's Ruth Riley scored to tie the game, then rebounded a miss by Purdue. She then took a shot, missed, but was fouled with 5.8 seconds left in the game. Riley sank both free throws to give the Irish a two-point lead and their first national championship.[6]

Tournament records edit

  • Three-point field goal percentage – Alicia Ratay, Notre Dame, hit four of five three-point field goal attempts(80%) in the semi-final game against Connecticut, tying a record for three-point field goal percentage in a Final Four game, held by four other players.
  • Margin overcome – Notre Dame overcame a 16-point deficit against Connecticut to win the game, setting a record for the largest margin overcome in a Final Four game.
  • Three-point field goal percentage – Notre Dame hit eight of eleven three-point field goal attempts, setting the record for best three-point field goal percentage in a Final Four game.
  • Blocks – Notre Dame recorded eleven blocks in the championship game against Purdue, tying the record for blocks in a Final Four game.
  • Assists – Tasha Pointer, Rutgers, recorded 18 assist in the West region first-round game against Stephen F. Austin, setting the record for most assists in an NCAA tournament game.
  • Field goal percentage – Connecticut held Long Island to 10 field goals on 65 attempts(15.4%) in an East region first-round game, setting the record for the best field goal defense in an NCAA tournament game.[7]

Qualifying teams – automatic edit

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2001 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2001 NCAA tournament.[7]

Automatic bids
    Record  
Qualifying school Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
Alcorn State SWAC 21–10 15–3 16
Austin Peay OVC 17–13 10–6 16
Chattanooga SoCon 24–6 15–3 12
Colorado State Mountain West 24–6 10–4 9
Connecticut Big East 28–2 15–1 1
Delaware America East 26–4 17–1 13
Duke ACC 28–3 13–3 1
Georgia SEC 26–5 11–3 2
Georgia State Trans America 24–6 15–3 14
Holy Cross Patriot League 21–8 11–1 14
Howard MEAC 22–9 15–3 15
Idaho State Big Sky 25–4 16–0 14
Iowa Big Ten 20–9 12–4 4
Iowa State Big 12 25–5 12–4 2
Liberty Big South 18–11 12–2 15
Long Island Northeast 16–14 11–7 16
Louisiana Tech Sun Belt 28–4 16–0 3
Milwaukee Horizon League 19–10 12–2 16
Old Dominion CAA 21–8 15–1 11
Oral Roberts Mid-Continent 20–10 11–5 15
Penn Ivy League 23–5 14–0 15
Siena MAAC 24–5 17–1 11
Saint Mary's West Coast 25–5 11–3 9
Southwest Missouri State Missouri Valley 25–5 16–2 5
Stanford Pac-10 18–10 12–6 10
Stephen F. Austin Southland 26–6 18–2 13
TCU WAC 24–7 13–3 11
Toledo MAC 25–5 15–1 12
Tulane C-USA 22–9 12–4 10
UC Santa Barbara Big West 22–8 12–2 14
Xavier Atlantic 10 28–2 15–1 4

Qualifying teams – at-large edit

Thirty-three additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.[7]

At-large bids
    Record  
Qualifying school Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
Arizona State Pacific-10 20–10 12–6 11
Arkansas SEC 19–12 6–8 9
Baylor Big 12 21–8 9–7 8
Clemson ACC 20–9 10–6 5
Colorado Big 12 21–8 11–5 6
Denver Sun Belt 24–6 14–2 10
Drake Missouri Valley 23–6 16–2 12
Fairfield MAAC 25–5 16–2 12
Florida SEC 23–5 11–3 3
Florida State ACC 18–11 9–7 7
George Washington Atlantic 10 22–9 14–2 7
Louisville C-USA 19–9 14–2 13
LSU SEC 19–10 8–6 6
Maryland ACC 17–11 8–8 8
Michigan Big Ten 18–11 10–6 8
Missouri Big 12 20–9 10–6 10
N.C. State ACC 20–10 9–7 4
Notre Dame Big East 28–2 15–1 1
Oklahoma Big 12 26–5 15–1 2
Oregon Pacific-10 17–11 10–8 13
Penn State Big Ten 19–9 11–5 6
Purdue Big Ten 26–6 14–2 3
Rutgers Big East 22–7 13–3 4
Tennessee SEC 29–2 14–0 1
Texas Big 12 20–12 7–9 8
Texas Tech Big 12 23–6 13–3 2
Utah Mountain West 26–3 14–0 5
Vanderbilt SEC 21–9 8–6 3
Villanova Big East 21–8 11–5 5
Virginia ACC 18–13 8–8 9
Virginia Tech Big East 21-8 11–5 7
Washington Pacific-10 19–9 12–6 6
Wisconsin Big Ten 18–9 12–4 7

Bids by conference edit

Thirty-one conferences earned an automatic bid. In nineteen cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-three additional at-large teams were selected from twelve of the conferences.[7]

Bids Conference Teams
7 Big 12 Iowa State, Baylor, Colorado, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, Texas Tech
6 Atlantic Coast Duke, Clemson, Florida State, Maryland, NC State, Virginia
6 Southeastern Georgia, Arkansas, Florida, LSU, Tennessee, Vanderbilt
5 Big East Connecticut, Notre Dame, Rutgers, Villanova, Virginia Tech
5 Big Ten Iowa, Michigan, Penn State, Purdue, Wisconsin
4 Pacific-10 Arizona State, Oregon, Stanford, Washington
2 Atlantic 10 Xavier, George Washington
2 Conference USA Tulane, Louisville
2 Metro Atlantic Siena, Fairfield
2 Missouri Valley SW Missouri State, Drake
2 Mountain West Colorado State, Utah
2 Sun Belt Louisiana Tech, Denver
1 America East Delaware.
1 Big Sky Idaho State
1 Big South Liberty
1 Big West UC Santa Barbara
1 CAA Old Dominion
1 Horizon Milwaukee
1 Ivy Penn
1 Mid-American Toledo
1 Mid-Continent Oral Roberts
1 MEAC Howard
1 Northeast Long Island
1 Ohio Valley Austin Peay
1 Patriot Holy Cross
1 Southern Chattanooga
1 Southland Stephen F. Austin
1 Southwestern Alcorn State
1 Trans America Georgia State
1 West Coast St. Mary's Cal.
1 WAC TCU

First and second rounds edit

 
 
Athens
 
Raleigh
 
Storrs
 
Ruston
 
Knoxville
 
West Lafayette
 
Lubbock
 
Cincinnati
 
Notre Dame
 
Nashville
 
Ames
 
Salt Lake City
 
Norman
 
Piscataway
 
Gainesville
 
Durham
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2001 NCAA NCAA first and second round venues

In 2001, 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:

  • Fourth seeded Iowa was unable to host so fifth seeded Utah hosted three first and second-round games

The following table lists the region, host school, venue and the sixteen first and second round locations:[8]

Region Rnd Host Venue City State
East 1&2 University of Georgia Georgia Coliseum (Stegeman Coliseum) Athens Georgia
East 1&2 North Carolina State University Reynolds Coliseum Raleigh North Carolina
East 1&2 University of Connecticut Harry A. Gampel Pavilion Storrs Connecticut
East 1&2 Louisiana Tech University Thomas Assembly Center Ruston Louisiana
Mideast 1&2 University of Tennessee Thompson-Boling Arena Knoxville Tennessee
Mideast 1&2 Purdue University Mackey Arena West Lafayette Indiana
Mideast 1&2 Texas Tech University United Spirit Arena Lubbock Texas
Mideast 1&2 Xavier University Cintas Center Cincinnati Ohio
Midwest 1&2 University of Notre Dame Edmund P. Joyce Center Notre Dame Indiana
Midwest 1&2 Vanderbilt University Memorial Gymnasium Nashville Tennessee
Midwest 1&2 Iowa State University Hilton Coliseum Ames Iowa
Midwest 1&2 University of Utah Jon M. Huntsman Center Salt Lake City Utah
West 1&2 University of Oklahoma Lloyd Noble Center Norman Oklahoma
West 1&2 Rutgers University Louis Brown Athletic Center Piscataway New Jersey
West 1&2 University of Florida O'Connell Center Gainesville Florida
West 1&2 Duke University Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North Carolina

Regionals and Final Four edit

 
 
Denver
 
Birmingham
 
Pittsburgh
 
Spokane
 
St. Louis
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2001 NCAA regionals and Final Four

The Regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 24 to March 26 at these sites:

Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held March 30 and April 1 in St. Louis, Missouri at the Savvis Center (Host: Missouri Valley Conference)

Bids by state edit

The sixty-four teams came from thirty-two states, plus Washington, D.C. Texas had the most teams with five bids. Eighteen states did not have any teams receiving bids.[7]

 
NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2001
Bids State Teams
5 Texas Stephen F. Austin, TCU, Baylor, Texas, Texas Tech
4 Tennessee Austin Peay, Chattanooga, Tennessee, Vanderbilt
4 Virginia Liberty, Old Dominion, Virginia, Virginia Tech
3 California Saint Mary's, Stanford, UC Santa Barbara
3 Colorado Colorado State, Colorado, Denver
3 Iowa Iowa, Iowa State, Drake
3 Louisiana Louisiana Tech, Tulane, LSU
3 Pennsylvania Penn, Penn State, Villanova
2 Connecticut Connecticut, Fairfield
2 District of Columbia Howard, George Washington
2 Florida Florida, Florida State
2 Georgia Georgia, Georgia State
2 Indiana Notre Dame, Purdue
2 Missouri SW Missouri State, Missouri
2 New York Long Island, Siena
2 North Carolina Duke, NC State
2 Ohio Toledo, Xavier
2 Oklahoma Oral Roberts, Oklahoma
2 Wisconsin Milwaukee, Wisconsin
1 Arizona Arizona State
1 Arkansas Arkansas
1 Delaware Delaware
1 Idaho Idaho State
1 Kentucky Louisville
1 Maryland Maryland
1 Massachusetts Holy Cross
1 Michigan Michigan
1 Mississippi Alcorn State
1 New Jersey Rutgers
1 Oregon Oregon
1 South Carolina Clemson
1 Utah Utah
1 Washington Washington

Brackets edit

Data source[9]

Mideast regional – Birmingham, AL edit

First round
March 16–17
Second round
March 18–19
Regional semifinals
March 24
Regional finals
March 26
            
1 at Tennessee 90
16 Austin Peay 38
1 Tennessee 92
9 Saint Mary's 75
8 Texas 64
9 Saint Mary's 68
1 Tennessee 65
4 Xavier 80
5 Clemson 51
12 Chattanooga 49
5 Clemson 62
4 Xavier 77
4 at Xavier 80
13 Louisville 52
4 Xavier 78
3 Purdue 88
6 LSU 83
11 Arizona State 66
6 LSU 70
3 Purdue 73
3 at Purdue 75
14 UC Santa Barbara 62
3 Purdue 74
2 Texas Tech 72
7 Virginia Tech 77
10 Denver 57
7 Virginia Tech 52
2 Texas Tech 73
2 at Texas Tech 100
15 Penn 57

West regional – Spokane, Washington edit

First round
March 16–17
Second round
March 18–19
Regional semifinals
March 24
Regional finals
March 26
            
1 at Duke 95
16 UW–Milwaukee 63
1 Duke 75
9 Arkansas 54
8 Baylor 59
9 Arkansas 68
1 Duke 71
5 SW Missouri State 81
5 SW Missouri State 89
12 Toledo 71
5 SW Missouri State 60
4 Rutgers 53
4 at Rutgers 80
13 Stephen F. Austin 43
5 SW Missouri State 104
6 Washington 87
6 Washington 67
11 Old Dominion 65
6 Washington 86
3 Florida 75
3 at Florida 84
14 Holy Cross 52
6 Washington 84
2 Oklahoma 67
7 George Washington 51
10 Stanford 76
10 Stanford 50
2 Oklahoma 67
2 at Oklahoma 70
15 Oral Roberts 64

Midwest regional – Denver, Colorado edit

First round
March 16–17
Second round
March 18–19
Regional semifinals
March 24
Regional finals
March 26
            
1 at Notre Dame 98
16 Alcorn State 49
1 Notre Dame 88
8 Michigan 54
8 Michigan 81
9 Virginia 71
1 Notre Dame 69
5 Utah 54
5 at Utah 79
12 Fairfield 57
5 Utah 78
4 Iowa 69
4 Iowa 89
13 Oregon 82
1 Notre Dame 72
3 Vanderbilt 64
6 Colorado 98
11 Siena 78
6 Colorado 59
3 Vanderbilt 65
3 at Vanderbilt 83
14 Idaho State 57
3 Vanderbilt 84
2 Iowa State 65
7 Florida State 72
10 Tulane 70
7 Florida State 70
2 Iowa State 85
2 at Iowa State 100
15 Howard 61

East regional – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania edit

First round
March 16–17
Second round
March 18–19
Regional semifinals
March 24
Regional finals
March 26
            
1 at Connecticut 101
16 Long Island 29
1 Connecticut 89
9 Colorado State 44
8 Maryland 69
9 Colorado State 83
1 Connecticut 72
4 NC State 58
5 Villanova 66
12 Drake 58
5 Villanova 64
4 NC State 68
4 at NC State 76
13 Delaware 57
1 Connecticut 67
3 Louisiana Tech 48
6 Penn State 75
11 TCU 77
11 TCU 59
3 Louisiana Tech 80
3 at Louisiana Tech 84
14 Georgia State 48
3 Louisiana Tech 78
10 Missouri 67
7 Wisconsin 68
10 Missouri 71
10 Missouri 78
2 Georgia 65
2 at Georgia 77
15 Liberty 48

Final Four – St. Louis, Missouri edit

National semifinals
March 30
National championship
April 1
      
ME3 Purdue 81
W5 SW Missouri State 64
ME3 Purdue 66
MW1 Notre Dame 68
MW1 Notre Dame 90
E1 Connecticut 75

Record by conference edit

Fourteen 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
Big 12 7 9–7 .563 5 4 0 0 0
Southeastern 6 9–6 .600 6 2 1 0 0
Atlantic Coast 6 6–6 .500 4 2 0 0 0
Big East 5 13–4 .765 5 2 2 2 1
Big Ten 5 7–5 .583 3 1 1 1 1
Pacific-10 4 4–4 .500 2 1 1 0 0
Missouri Valley 2 4–2 .667 1 1 1 1 0
Atlantic 10 2 3–2 .600 1 1 1 0 0
Mountain West 2 3–2 .600 2 1 0 0 0
Sun Belt 2 3–2 .600 1 1 1 0 0
Conference USA 2 0–2 .000 0 0 0 0 0
Metro Atlantic 2 0–2 .000 0 0 0 0 0
West Coast 1 1–1 .500 1 0 0 0 0
Western Athletic 1 1–1 .500 1 0 0 0 0

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

All-Tournament team edit

Game officials edit

  • Dennis DeMayo (semifinal)
  • Wesley Dean (semifinal)
  • Nan Sisk (semifinal)
  • June Courteau (semifinal)
  • Greg Small (semifinal)
  • Melissa Barlow (semifinal)
  • Sally Bell (final)
  • Scott Yarbrough (final)
  • Lisa Mattingly (final) [7]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gregory Cooper. . Archived from the original on October 20, 2009. Retrieved April 17, 2007.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on January 25, 2008. Retrieved April 17, 2007.
  3. ^ Rodgers, Jenn. . NCAA. Archived from the original on 1 June 2013. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  4. ^ "Purdue handcuffs Stiles, SMS in 81-64 victory". The Florida Times Union. March 31, 2001. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  5. ^ "Notre Dame rallies to defeat Connecticut". CNN SI. March 31, 2001. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  6. ^ "Ruthless". CNN SI. April 1, 2001. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Nixon, Rick. "Official 2022 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  8. ^ "Attendance and Sites" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  9. ^ "Official 2012 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book". NCAA. February 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2012.

2001, ncaa, division, women, basketball, tournament, began, march, ended, april, tournament, featured, teams, final, four, held, savvis, center, scottrade, center, louis, consisted, connecticut, notre, dame, purdue, southwest, missouri, state, missouri, state,. The 2001 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament began on March 16 and ended on April 1 The tournament featured 64 teams The Final Four held at the Savvis Center now Scottrade Center in St Louis consisted of Connecticut Notre Dame Purdue and Southwest Missouri State now Missouri State with Notre Dame defeating Purdue 68 66 to win its first NCAA title 1 Notre Dame s Ruth Riley was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament 2 2001 NCAA Division Iwomen s basketball tournamentTeams64Finals siteSavvis CenterSt Louis MissouriChampionsNotre Dame Fighting Irish 1st title Runner upPurdue Boilermakers 2nd title game SemifinalistsConnecticut Huskies 5th Final Four Missouri State Bears 2nd Final Four MOPRuth Riley Notre Dame NCAA Division I women s tournaments 2000 2002 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 Mideast regional Birmingham AL 9 2 West regional Spokane Washington 9 3 Midwest regional Denver Colorado 9 4 East regional Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 9 5 Final Four St Louis Missouri 10 Record by conference 11 All Tournament team 12 Game officials 13 See also 14 NotesNotable events editWith the Final Four held in the state of Missouri for the first time in NCAA history 10th seeded University of Missouri rose to the occasion and upset 7th seeded Wisconsin in the first round They then went on to play the 2nd seeded team from Georgia and won that game as well advancing to the regional where their bid to play in their home state ended in a loss to Louisiana Tech Missouri State also did well They were seeded 5th so expected to win their first round game but they went on to upset 4th seed Rutgers to set up a game against the Regional s top seed Duke Missouri State upset Duke 81 71 to head to the regional final against Washington who had upset both Florida and Oklahoma The upsets came to an end as 5th seeded Missouri State beat 6th seeded Washington 104 87 to advance to the Final Four and a chance to play in front of home state fans In the Mideast Regional the top four seeds all advanced to the regional semifinal then both higher seeds were upset 4th seed Xavier knocked off the number one seed in the regional Tennessee by a score of 80 65 Third seeded Purdue played second seeded Texas Tech in a game that came down to the wire Purdue won 74 72 then went on to defeat Xavier for the spot in the Final Four against Missouri State The upset run by Missouri State came to an end in the semifinal as Purdue beat them 81 64 The career of Jackie Stiles who had scored 1 064 points during the season the first player in NCAA Division I women s basketball history to score 1000 points in a season came to an end 3 4 In the Midwest and East regionals both number one seeds advanced to the Final Four Both Notre Dame and Connecticut were from the Big East and met in the other semifinal The two teams had met twice before in the season with Notre Dame winning at their home and UConn beating Notre Dame in the Big East Championship Early in the game the prior year National Champion Connecticut looked to be on their way to another championship game The Huskies led at one point by 16 points in the first half In the second half Notre Dame came back and with just over twelve minutes left took their first lead of the game Connecticut went into a scoring drought going more than five minutes without a point Notre Dame went on to win 90 75 to head to their first national championship game 5 The championship game featured two teams from Indiana Notre Dame began the game with a repeat of their performance against Connecticut falling behind by double digits in the first half The Irish were the best three point shooting team in the country but ended up hitting just one of ten attempts Purdue s Katie Douglas scored 18 points for Purdue with her final points being a three pointer to put the Boilermakers in front 66 64 with a little over one minute left in the game Notre Dame s Ruth Riley scored to tie the game then rebounded a miss by Purdue She then took a shot missed but was fouled with 5 8 seconds left in the game Riley sank both free throws to give the Irish a two point lead and their first national championship 6 Tournament records editThree point field goal percentage Alicia Ratay Notre Dame hit four of five three point field goal attempts 80 in the semi final game against Connecticut tying a record for three point field goal percentage in a Final Four game held by four other players Margin overcome Notre Dame overcame a 16 point deficit against Connecticut to win the game setting a record for the largest margin overcome in a Final Four game Three point field goal percentage Notre Dame hit eight of eleven three point field goal attempts setting the record for best three point field goal percentage in a Final Four game Blocks Notre Dame recorded eleven blocks in the championship game against Purdue tying the record for blocks in a Final Four game Assists Tasha Pointer Rutgers recorded 18 assist in the West region first round game against Stephen F Austin setting the record for most assists in an NCAA tournament game Field goal percentage Connecticut held Long Island to 10 field goals on 65 attempts 15 4 in an East region first round game setting the record for the best field goal defense in an NCAA tournament game 7 Qualifying teams automatic editSixty four teams were selected to participate in the 2001 NCAA Tournament Thirty one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2001 NCAA tournament 7 Automatic bids Record Qualifying school Conference Regular Season Conference SeedAlcorn State SWAC 21 10 15 3 16Austin Peay OVC 17 13 10 6 16Chattanooga SoCon 24 6 15 3 12Colorado State Mountain West 24 6 10 4 9Connecticut Big East 28 2 15 1 1Delaware America East 26 4 17 1 13Duke ACC 28 3 13 3 1Georgia SEC 26 5 11 3 2Georgia State Trans America 24 6 15 3 14Holy Cross Patriot League 21 8 11 1 14Howard MEAC 22 9 15 3 15Idaho State Big Sky 25 4 16 0 14Iowa Big Ten 20 9 12 4 4Iowa State Big 12 25 5 12 4 2Liberty Big South 18 11 12 2 15Long Island Northeast 16 14 11 7 16Louisiana Tech Sun Belt 28 4 16 0 3Milwaukee Horizon League 19 10 12 2 16Old Dominion CAA 21 8 15 1 11Oral Roberts Mid Continent 20 10 11 5 15Penn Ivy League 23 5 14 0 15Siena MAAC 24 5 17 1 11Saint Mary s West Coast 25 5 11 3 9Southwest Missouri State Missouri Valley 25 5 16 2 5Stanford Pac 10 18 10 12 6 10Stephen F Austin Southland 26 6 18 2 13TCU WAC 24 7 13 3 11Toledo MAC 25 5 15 1 12Tulane C USA 22 9 12 4 10UC Santa Barbara Big West 22 8 12 2 14Xavier Atlantic 10 28 2 15 1 4Qualifying teams at large editThirty three additional teams were selected to complete the sixty four invitations 7 At large bids Record Qualifying school Conference Regular Season Conference SeedArizona State Pacific 10 20 10 12 6 11Arkansas SEC 19 12 6 8 9Baylor Big 12 21 8 9 7 8Clemson ACC 20 9 10 6 5Colorado Big 12 21 8 11 5 6Denver Sun Belt 24 6 14 2 10Drake Missouri Valley 23 6 16 2 12Fairfield MAAC 25 5 16 2 12Florida SEC 23 5 11 3 3Florida State ACC 18 11 9 7 7George Washington Atlantic 10 22 9 14 2 7Louisville C USA 19 9 14 2 13LSU SEC 19 10 8 6 6Maryland ACC 17 11 8 8 8Michigan Big Ten 18 11 10 6 8Missouri Big 12 20 9 10 6 10N C State ACC 20 10 9 7 4Notre Dame Big East 28 2 15 1 1Oklahoma Big 12 26 5 15 1 2Oregon Pacific 10 17 11 10 8 13Penn State Big Ten 19 9 11 5 6Purdue Big Ten 26 6 14 2 3Rutgers Big East 22 7 13 3 4Tennessee SEC 29 2 14 0 1Texas Big 12 20 12 7 9 8Texas Tech Big 12 23 6 13 3 2Utah Mountain West 26 3 14 0 5Vanderbilt SEC 21 9 8 6 3Villanova Big East 21 8 11 5 5Virginia ACC 18 13 8 8 9Virginia Tech Big East 21 8 11 5 7Washington Pacific 10 19 9 12 6 6Wisconsin Big Ten 18 9 12 4 7Bids by conference editThirty one conferences earned an automatic bid In nineteen cases the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference Thirty three additional at large teams were selected from twelve of the conferences 7 Bids Conference Teams7 Big 12 Iowa State Baylor Colorado Missouri Oklahoma Texas Texas Tech6 Atlantic Coast Duke Clemson Florida State Maryland NC State Virginia6 Southeastern Georgia Arkansas Florida LSU Tennessee Vanderbilt5 Big East Connecticut Notre Dame Rutgers Villanova Virginia Tech5 Big Ten Iowa Michigan Penn State Purdue Wisconsin4 Pacific 10 Arizona State Oregon Stanford Washington2 Atlantic 10 Xavier George Washington2 Conference USA Tulane Louisville2 Metro Atlantic Siena Fairfield2 Missouri Valley SW Missouri State Drake2 Mountain West Colorado State Utah2 Sun Belt Louisiana Tech Denver1 America East Delaware 1 Big Sky Idaho State1 Big South Liberty1 Big West UC Santa Barbara1 CAA Old Dominion1 Horizon Milwaukee1 Ivy Penn1 Mid American Toledo1 Mid Continent Oral Roberts1 MEAC Howard1 Northeast Long Island1 Ohio Valley Austin Peay1 Patriot Holy Cross1 Southern Chattanooga1 Southland Stephen F Austin1 Southwestern Alcorn State1 Trans America Georgia State1 West Coast St Mary s Cal 1 WAC TCUFirst and second rounds edit nbsp nbsp Athens nbsp Raleigh nbsp Storrs nbsp Ruston nbsp Knoxville nbsp West Lafayette nbsp Lubbock nbsp Cincinnati nbsp Notre Dame nbsp Nashville nbsp Ames nbsp Salt Lake City nbsp Norman nbsp Piscataway nbsp Gainesville nbsp Durhamclass notpageimage 2001 NCAA NCAA first and second round venues In 2001 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 Fourth seeded Iowa was unable to host so fifth seeded Utah hosted three first and second round gamesThe following table lists the region host school venue and the sixteen first and second round locations 8 Region Rnd Host Venue City StateEast 1 amp 2 University of Georgia Georgia Coliseum Stegeman Coliseum Athens GeorgiaEast 1 amp 2 North Carolina State University Reynolds Coliseum Raleigh North CarolinaEast 1 amp 2 University of Connecticut Harry A Gampel Pavilion Storrs ConnecticutEast 1 amp 2 Louisiana Tech University Thomas Assembly Center Ruston LouisianaMideast 1 amp 2 University of Tennessee Thompson Boling Arena Knoxville TennesseeMideast 1 amp 2 Purdue University Mackey Arena West Lafayette IndianaMideast 1 amp 2 Texas Tech University United Spirit Arena Lubbock TexasMideast 1 amp 2 Xavier University Cintas Center Cincinnati OhioMidwest 1 amp 2 University of Notre Dame Edmund P Joyce Center Notre Dame IndianaMidwest 1 amp 2 Vanderbilt University Memorial Gymnasium Nashville TennesseeMidwest 1 amp 2 Iowa State University Hilton Coliseum Ames IowaMidwest 1 amp 2 University of Utah Jon M Huntsman Center Salt Lake City UtahWest 1 amp 2 University of Oklahoma Lloyd Noble Center Norman OklahomaWest 1 amp 2 Rutgers University Louis Brown Athletic Center Piscataway New JerseyWest 1 amp 2 University of Florida O Connell Center Gainesville FloridaWest 1 amp 2 Duke University Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North CarolinaRegionals and Final Four edit nbsp nbsp Denver nbsp Birmingham nbsp Pittsburgh nbsp Spokane nbsp St Louisclass notpageimage 2001 NCAA regionals and Final Four The Regionals named for the general location were held from March 24 to March 26 at these sites Midwest Regional Pepsi Center Denver Colorado Host University of Colorado Mideast Regional Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex Birmingham Alabama Host Southeastern Conference East Regional Mellon Arena Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Host Duquesne University West Regional Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Spokane Washington Host Washington State University Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held March 30 and April 1 in St Louis Missouri at the Savvis Center Host Missouri Valley Conference Bids by state editThe sixty four teams came from thirty two states plus Washington D C Texas had the most teams with five bids Eighteen states did not have any teams receiving bids 7 nbsp NCAA Women s basketball Tournament invitations by state 2001Bids State Teams5 Texas Stephen F Austin TCU Baylor Texas Texas Tech4 Tennessee Austin Peay Chattanooga Tennessee Vanderbilt4 Virginia Liberty Old Dominion Virginia Virginia Tech3 California Saint Mary s Stanford UC Santa Barbara3 Colorado Colorado State Colorado Denver3 Iowa Iowa Iowa State Drake3 Louisiana Louisiana Tech Tulane LSU3 Pennsylvania Penn Penn State Villanova2 Connecticut Connecticut Fairfield2 District of Columbia Howard George Washington2 Florida Florida Florida State2 Georgia Georgia Georgia State2 Indiana Notre Dame Purdue2 Missouri SW Missouri State Missouri2 New York Long Island Siena2 North Carolina Duke NC State2 Ohio Toledo Xavier2 Oklahoma Oral Roberts Oklahoma2 Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin1 Arizona Arizona State1 Arkansas Arkansas1 Delaware Delaware1 Idaho Idaho State1 Kentucky Louisville1 Maryland Maryland1 Massachusetts Holy Cross1 Michigan Michigan1 Mississippi Alcorn State1 New Jersey Rutgers1 Oregon Oregon1 South Carolina Clemson1 Utah Utah1 Washington WashingtonBrackets editData source 9 Mideast regional Birmingham AL edit First roundMarch 16 17Second roundMarch 18 19Regional semifinalsMarch 24Regional finalsMarch 26 1at Tennessee9016Austin Peay381Tennessee929Saint Mary s758Texas649Saint Mary s681Tennessee654Xavier805Clemson5112Chattanooga495Clemson624Xavier774at Xavier8013Louisville524Xavier783Purdue886LSU8311Arizona State666LSU703Purdue733at Purdue7514UC Santa Barbara623Purdue742Texas Tech727Virginia Tech7710Denver577Virginia Tech522Texas Tech732at Texas Tech10015Penn57West regional Spokane Washington edit First roundMarch 16 17Second roundMarch 18 19Regional semifinalsMarch 24Regional finalsMarch 26 1at Duke9516UW Milwaukee631Duke759Arkansas548Baylor599Arkansas681Duke715SW Missouri State815SW Missouri State8912Toledo715SW Missouri State604Rutgers534at Rutgers8013Stephen F Austin435SW Missouri State1046Washington876Washington6711Old Dominion656Washington863Florida753at Florida8414Holy Cross526Washington842Oklahoma677George Washington5110Stanford7610Stanford502Oklahoma672at Oklahoma7015Oral Roberts64Midwest regional Denver Colorado edit First roundMarch 16 17Second roundMarch 18 19Regional semifinalsMarch 24Regional finalsMarch 26 1at Notre Dame9816Alcorn State491Notre Dame888Michigan548Michigan819Virginia711Notre Dame695Utah545at Utah7912Fairfield575Utah784Iowa694Iowa8913Oregon821Notre Dame723Vanderbilt646Colorado9811Siena786Colorado593Vanderbilt653at Vanderbilt8314Idaho State573Vanderbilt842Iowa State657Florida State7210Tulane707Florida State702Iowa State852at Iowa State10015Howard61East regional Pittsburgh Pennsylvania edit First roundMarch 16 17Second roundMarch 18 19Regional semifinalsMarch 24Regional finalsMarch 26 1at Connecticut10116Long Island291Connecticut899Colorado State448Maryland699Colorado State831Connecticut724NC State585Villanova6612Drake585Villanova644NC State684at NC State7613Delaware571Connecticut673Louisiana Tech486Penn State7511TCU7711TCU593Louisiana Tech803at Louisiana Tech8414Georgia State483Louisiana Tech7810Missouri677Wisconsin6810Missouri7110Missouri782Georgia652at Georgia7715Liberty48Final Four St Louis Missouri edit National semifinalsMarch 30National championshipApril 1 ME3Purdue81W5SW Missouri State64ME3Purdue66MW1Notre Dame68MW1Notre Dame90E1Connecticut75Record by conference editFourteen 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 GameBig 12 7 9 7 563 5 4 0 0 0Southeastern 6 9 6 600 6 2 1 0 0Atlantic Coast 6 6 6 500 4 2 0 0 0Big East 5 13 4 765 5 2 2 2 1Big Ten 5 7 5 583 3 1 1 1 1Pacific 10 4 4 4 500 2 1 1 0 0Missouri Valley 2 4 2 667 1 1 1 1 0Atlantic 10 2 3 2 600 1 1 1 0 0Mountain West 2 3 2 600 2 1 0 0 0Sun Belt 2 3 2 600 1 1 1 0 0Conference USA 2 0 2 000 0 0 0 0 0Metro Atlantic 2 0 2 000 0 0 0 0 0West Coast 1 1 1 500 1 0 0 0 0Western Athletic 1 1 1 500 1 0 0 0 0Seventeen conferences went 0 1 America East Big Sky Conference Big South Conference Big West Conference Colonial Horizon League Ivy League MAC Mid Continent MEAC Northeast Conference Ohio Valley Conference Patriot League Southern Conference Southland SWAC and Trans AmericaAll Tournament team editRuth Riley Notre Dame Niele Ivey Notre Dame Katie Douglas Purdue Shalicia Hurns Purdue Shereka Wright Purdue 7 Game officials editDennis DeMayo semifinal Wesley Dean semifinal Nan Sisk semifinal June Courteau semifinal Greg Small semifinal Melissa Barlow semifinal Sally Bell final Scott Yarbrough final Lisa Mattingly final 7 See also edit2001 NCAA Division II women s basketball tournament 2001 NCAA Division III women s basketball tournament 2001 NAIA Division I women s basketball tournament 2001 NAIA Division II women s basketball tournament 2001 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournamentNotes edit Gregory Cooper 2001 NCAA National Championship Tournament Archived from the original on October 20 2009 Retrieved April 17 2007 CHN Basketball History Most Outstanding Player Archived from the original on January 25 2008 Retrieved April 17 2007 Rodgers Jenn 2012 13 NCAA Women s Basketball Records Division I NCAA Archived from the original on 1 June 2013 Retrieved 27 May 2013 Purdue handcuffs Stiles SMS in 81 64 victory The Florida Times Union March 31 2001 Retrieved May 27 2013 Notre Dame rallies to defeat Connecticut CNN SI March 31 2001 Retrieved May 27 2013 Ruthless CNN SI April 1 2001 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 2001 NCAA Division I women 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1171359329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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