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2002 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 2002 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament concluded on March 31, 2002 when Connecticut won the national title. The Final Four was held at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas on March 29–31, 2002. UConn, coached by Geno Auriemma, defeated Oklahoma 82-70 in the championship game.

2002 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
2002 Final Four logo
Teams64
Finals siteAlamodome
San Antonio, Texas
ChampionsConnecticut Huskies (3rd title)
Runner-upOklahoma Sooners (1st title game)
Semifinalists
MOPSwin Cash (Connecticut)

Notable events edit

After wins in the first three rounds, Connecticut faced Old Dominion in the Mideast regional finals. The opening 16 minutes were described as "near-perfect", as the Huskies hit over 90% of their shots (19 of 21) and too had a 49–28 lead. That 21 point margin would match the final margin, as the Huskies would move on to the Final Four. Sue Bird scored 26 points, a career high, and eleven assist. The team recorded 25 assists, which brought their season total to 811, a new NCAA season record.[1]

In the other three regions all the number one seeds, Tennessee, Oklahoma and Duke all advanced to the Final Four. A dozen years earlier, Oklahoma attempted to eliminate the women's basketball program, but now the program had advanced to their first final four, and faced Duke in one semifinal game. Duke opened the game with a 13–7 run, but the Sooners responded with 12 consecutive points. Oklahoma managed to get to a 17-point lead in the second half, but Duke cut the lead to only two points with just under eight minutes to go. Oklahoma responded with a 16–3 run to take a decisive lead, and won the game 86–71 to head to the national championship game.[2]

In the other semifinal, UConn faced Tennessee. Although Tennessee scored first, but that would be the last time they would lead. The Huskies responded, opened up an early lead, and extended it to 13 points at halftime. Connecticut extended the lead in the beginning of the second half, with a 24–11 run, and went on to hold the Lady Vols to 31% shooting. No Tennessee player scored in double digits; Kara Lawson led the team with nine points. The win extended the perfect season by Connecticut to 38 games, while marking the fourth time in the last five meetings that the Huskies had beaten the Lady Vols.[3][4]

In the championship game, the Sooners were out rebounded and outshot, but did not give up. Oklahoma did not give up a single three point shot, the first time that has occurred in an NCAA title game, and the last time that would happen to the Connecticut team in any game for over a decade. With a minute and a half to go, the Huskies held a lead, but only six points. UConn had the ball, and despite having four seniors on the floor who would go 1,2 4 and 6 in the 2002 WNBA Draft, gave the ball to sophomore Diana Taurasi, who backed down Oklahoma's Stacy Dales then took a turn around jumper than went in, while Dales fouled Taurasi to foul out of the game. Taurasi hit the foul shot to extend the lead to nine points, and the Huskies would go on to be the first team in history to record two undefeated seasons, winning their third national championship.[5]

The championship game attendance of 29,619 set the still-standing attendance record for an official game in women's basketball history. A 2023 exhibition between Iowa and DePaul held at Kinnick Stadium, home to Iowa football, had an attendance of 55,646.[6]

Tournament records edit

  • Fewest turnovers – Louisiana Tech committed only three turnovers in the East regional first-round game against UC Santa Barbara, setting the record for fewest turnovers in an NCAA tournament game. Unfortunately for the Lady Techsters, the low number of turnovers could not prevent UCSB from winning.
  • Free throws – Sue Bird hit 20 free throws out of 20 attempts, one of several players to hit 100% of their free throws in an NCAA tournament; 20 is the largest such total.
  • Assists – Connecticut recorded 128 assists, setting the record for most assists in an NCAA tournament
  • Blocks – Connecticut recorded 53 blocks, setting the record for blocks in an NCAA tournament[7]

Qualifying teams – automatic edit

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2002 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2002 NCAA tournament.[7]

Automatic Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
Arizona State University Pac-10 24–8 12–6 9
Austin Peay State University Ohio Valley Conference 19–11 9–7 15
Bucknell University Patriot League 21–9 11–3 15
Brigham Young University Mountain West 22–8 10–4 11
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Southern Conference 23–7 14–4 13
University of Cincinnati Conference USA 26–4 11–3 6
University of Connecticut Big East 33–0 16–0 1
Creighton University Missouri Valley Conference 24–6 16–2 12
Duke University ACC 27–3 16–0 1
Florida International University Sun Belt Conference 26–5 13–1 5
Georgia State University Atlantic Sun Conference 21–9 14–6 15
University of Wisconsin–Green Bay Horizon League 24–6 15–1 13
University of Hartford America East 16–14 9–7 16
Harvard University Ivy League 22–5 13–1 13
Indiana University Bloomington Big Ten 17–13 8–8 9
Kent State University MAC 20–10 13–3 14
Liberty University Big South Conference 23–7 13–1 14
Louisiana Tech University WAC 25–4 17–1 5
Norfolk State University MEAC 22–8 13–5 16
Oakland University Mid-Continent 17–13 8–6 16
University of Oklahoma Big 12 27–3 14–2 1
Old Dominion University Colonial 25–5 18–0 7
Pepperdine University West Coast Conference 23–7 11–3 8
Southern University SWAC 26–4 17–1 14
Saint Francis University Northeast Conference 19–11 14–4 16
Saint Peter's College MAAC 25–5 15–3 11
Stephen F. Austin State University Southland 24–5 19–1 13
Temple University Atlantic 10 20–10 12–4 14
University of California, Santa Barbara Big West Conference 25–5 16–0 12
Vanderbilt University SEC 27–6 10–4 1
Weber State University Big Sky Conference 22–8 11–3 15

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
University of Arkansas Southeastern 19–11 7–7 6
Baylor University Big 12 26–5 12–4 2
Boston College Big East 23–7 12–4 5
Clemson University Atlantic Coast 17–11 9–7 11
University of Colorado Boulder Big 12 21–9 11–5 3
Colorado State University Mountain West 24–6 12–2 7
Drake University Missouri Valley 23–7 15–3 7
University of Florida Southeastern 18–10 8–6 6
University of Georgia Southeastern 19–10 6–8 10
University of Iowa Big Ten 17–10 10–6 9
Iowa State University Big 12 23–8 9–7 3
Kansas State University Big 12 24–7 11–5 3
Louisiana State University Southeastern 17–11 8–6 6
University of Minnesota Big Ten 21–7 11–5 5
Mississippi State University Southeastern 18–11 8–6 12
University of New Mexico Mountain West 22–8 10–4 10
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Atlantic Coast 24–8 11–5 4
University of Notre Dame Big East 19–9 13–3 7
Pennsylvania State University Big Ten 21–11 11–5 4
Purdue University Big Ten 23–5 13–3 2
Santa Clara University West Coast 21–9 9–5 11
University of South Carolina Southeastern 22–6 10–4 3
Stanford University Pacific-10 30–2 18–0 2
Syracuse University Big East 18–12 9–7 10
Texas Christian University Conference USA 23–6 12–2 8
University of Tennessee Southeastern 25–4 13–1 2
University of Texas at Austin Big 12 20–9 10–6 4
Texas Tech University Big 12 18–11 8–8 4
Tulane University Conference USA 23–10 8–6 10
University of Nevada, Las Vegas Mountain West 23–7 9–5 12
Villanova University Big East 19–10 12–4 9
University of Virginia Atlantic Coast 17–12 9–7 8
University of Wisconsin–Madison Big Ten 19–11 8–8 8

Bids by conference edit

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

Bids Conference Teams
8 Southeastern Vanderbilt, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, LSU, Mississippi St., South Carolina, Tennessee
7 Big 12 Oklahoma, Baylor, Colorado, Iowa St., Kansas St., Texas, Texas Tech
6 Big Ten Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Penn St., Purdue, Wisconsin
5 Big East Connecticut, Boston College, Notre Dame, Syracuse, Villanova
4 Atlantic Coast Duke, Clemson, North Carolina, Virginia
4 Mountain West BYU, Colorado St., New Mexico, UNLV
3 Conference USA Cincinnati, TCU, Tulane
2 Missouri Valley Creighton, Drake
2 Pacific-10 Arizona St., Stanford
2 West Coast Pepperdine, Santa Clara
1 America East Hartford
1 Atlantic 10 Temple
1 Atlantic Sun Georgia St.
1 Big Sky Weber St..
1 Big South Liberty
1 Big West UC Santa Barb.
1 Colonial Old Dominion
1 Horizon Green Bay
1 Ivy Harvard
1 Metro Atlantic St. Peter’s.
1 Mid-American Kent St.
1 Mid-Continent Oakland
1 Mid-Eastern Norfolk St.
1 Northeast St. Francis Pa.
1 Ohio Valley Austin Peay
1 Patriot Bucknell
1 Southern Chattanooga
1 Southland Stephen F. Austin
1 Southwestern Southern U.
1 Sun Belt FIU
1 Western Athletic Louisiana Tech

First and second rounds edit

 
 
Austin
 
Durham
 
Waco
 
Columbia
 
West Lafayette
 
Storrs
 
University Park
 
Manhattan
 
Chapel Hill
 
Knoxville
 
Nashville
 
Ames
 
Norman
 
Boulder
 
Stanford
 
Lubbock
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2002 NCAA NCAA first and second round venues

In 2002, 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 all cases, the higher seed accepted the opportunity.[8]

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 Texas at Austin Frank Erwin Center Austin Texas
East 1&2 Duke University Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North Carolina
East 1&2 Baylor University Ferrell Center Waco Texas
East 1&2 University of South Carolina Carolina Coliseum Columbia South Carolina
Mideast 1&2 Purdue University Mackey Arena West Lafayette Indiana
Mideast 1&2 University of Connecticut Harry A. Gampel Pavilion Storrs Connecticut
Mideast 1&2 Pennsylvania State University Bryce Jordan Center University Park Pennsylvania
Mideast 1&2 Kansas State University Bramlage Coliseum Manhattan Kansas
Midwest 1&2 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Carmichael Auditorium Chapel Hill North Carolina
Midwest 1&2 University of Tennessee Thompson–Boling Arena Knoxville Tennessee
Midwest 1&2 Vanderbilt University Memorial Gymnasium Nashville Tennessee
Midwest 1&2 Iowa State University Hilton Coliseum Ames Iowa
West 1&2 University of Oklahoma Lloyd Noble Center Norman Oklahoma
West 1&2 University of Colorado Boulder CU Events Center (Coors Events Center) Boulder Colorado
West 1&2 Stanford University Maples Pavilion Stanford California
West 1&2 Texas Tech University United Spirit Arena Lubbock Texas

Regionals and Final Four edit

 
 
Ames
 
Raleigh
 
Milwaukee
 
Boise
 
San Antonio
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2002 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 March 29 and March 31 in San Antonio, Texas at the Alamodome, (Host: University of Texas at San Antonio)

Bids by state edit

The sixty-four teams came from thirty states. Texas had the most teams with five bids. Twenty states did not have any teams receiving bids.[7]

 
NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2002
Bids State Teams
5 Texas Stephen F. Austin, Baylor, TCU, Texas, Texas Tech
4 California Pepperdine, UC Santa Barb., Santa Clara, Stanford
4 Louisiana Louisiana Tech, Southern U., LSU, Tulane
4 Pennsylvania Bucknell, Temple, Penn St., Villanova
4 Tennessee Austin Peay, Chattanooga, Vanderbilt, Tennessee
4 Virginia Liberty, Norfolk St., Old Dominion, Virginia
3 Indiana Indiana, Notre Dame, Purdue
3 Iowa Drake, Iowa, Iowa St.
2 Colorado Colorado, Colorado St.
2 Connecticut Connecticut, Hartford
2 Florida FIU, Florida
2 Georgia Georgia St., Georgia
2 Massachusetts Harvard, Boston College
2 New York St. Francis Pa., Syracuse
2 North Carolina Duke, North Carolina
2 Ohio Cincinnati, Kent St.
2 South Carolina Clemson, South Carolina
2 Utah BYU, Weber St..
2 Wisconsin Green Bay, Wisconsin
1 Arizona Arizona St.
1 Arkansas Arkansas
1 Kansas Kansas St.
1 Michigan Oakland
1 Minnesota Minnesota
1 Mississippi Mississippi St.
1 Nebraska Creighton
1 Nevada UNLV
1 New Jersey St. Peter’s.
1 New Mexico New Mexico
1 Oklahoma Oklahoma

Brackets edit

Data Source[9]

* – Denotes overtime period

Mideast Region - Milwaukee, Wisconsin edit

First round Second round Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 at Connecticut 86
16 St. Francis (PA) 37
1 Connecticut 86
9 Iowa 48
8 Virginia 62
9 Iowa 69
1 Connecticut 82
4 Penn State 64
5 Florida International 73
12 Creighton 58
5 Florida International 79
4 Penn State 96
4 at Penn State 82
13 Chattanooga 67
1 Connecticut 85
7 Old Dominion 64
6 Arkansas 78
11 Clemson 68
6 Arkansas 68
3 Kansas State 82
3 at Kansas State 93
14 Kent State 65
3 Kansas State 62
7 Old Dominion 82
7 Old Dominion 68
10 Georgia 54
7 Old Dominion 74
2 Purdue 70*
2 at Purdue 80
15 Austin Peay 49

Midwest Region - Ames, Iowa edit

First round Second round Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 at Vanderbilt 63
16 Oakland 38
1 Vanderbilt 61
9 Arizona State 35
8 Wisconsin 70
9 Arizona State 73
1 Vanderbilt 70
4 North Carolina 61
5 Minnesota 71
12 UNLV 54
5 Minnesota 69
4 North Carolina 72
4 at North Carolina 85
13 Harvard 58
1 Vanderbilt 63
2 Tennessee 68
6 Florida 52
11 BYU 90
11 BYU 75
3 Iowa State 69
3 at Iowa State 72
14 Temple 57
11 BYU 57
2 Tennessee 68
7 Notre Dame 71
10 New Mexico 61
7 Notre Dame 50
2 Tennessee 89
2 at Tennessee 98
15 Georgia State 68

West Region - Boise, Idaho edit

First round Second round Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 at Oklahoma 84
16 Hartford 52
1 Oklahoma 66
9 Villanova 53
8 Pepperdine 46
9 Villanova 67
1 Oklahoma 72
4 Texas Tech 62
5 Boston College 59
12 Mississippi State 65
12 Mississippi State 55
4 Texas Tech 77
4 at Texas Tech 84
13 Stephen F. Austin 63
1 Oklahoma 94
3 Colorado 60
6 LSU 84
11 Santa Clara 78
6 LSU 58
3 Colorado 69
3 at Colorado 88
14 Southern 61
3 Colorado 62
2 Stanford 59
7 Colorado State 69
10 Tulane 73
10 Tulane 55
2 Stanford 77
2 at Stanford 76
15 Weber State 51

East Region - Raleigh, North Carolina edit

First round Second round Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 at Duke 95
16 Norfolk State 48
1 Duke 76
8 TCU 66
8 TCU 55
9 Indiana 45
1 Duke 62
4 Texas 46
5 Louisiana Tech 56
12 UC Santa Barbara 57
12 UC Santa Barbara 60
4 Texas 76
4 at Texas 60
13 Green Bay 55
1 Duke 77
3 South Carolina 68
6 Cincinnati 76*
11 St. Peter's 63
6 Cincinnati 56
3 South Carolina 75
3 at South Carolina 69
14 Liberty 61
3 South Carolina 79
7 Drake 65
7 Drake 87
10 Syracuse 69
7 Drake 76
2 Baylor 72
2 at Baylor 80
15 Bucknell 56

Final Four – San Antonio, Texas edit

National semifinals
March 29
National championship
March 31
      
ME1 Connecticut 79
MW2 Tennessee 56
ME1 Connecticut 82
W1 Oklahoma 70
W1 Oklahoma 86
E1 Duke 71

E-East; ME-Mideast; MW-Midwest; W-West

Record by conference edit

Conference # of Bids Record Win % Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Southeastern 8 13–8 .619 6 3 3 1 0
Big 12 7 16–7 .696 7 5 2 1 1
Big Ten 6 5–6 .455 4 1 0 0 0
Big East 5 8–4 .667 3 1 1 1 1
Atlantic Coast 4 6–4 .600 2 2 1 1 0
Mountain West 4 2–4 .333 1 1 0 0 0
Conference USA 3 3–3 .500 3 0 0 0 0
Pacific-10 2 3–2 .600 2 1 0 0 0
Missouri Valley 2 2–2 .500 1 1 0 0 0
West Coast 2 0–2 .000 0 0 0 0 0
Colonial 1 3–1 .750 1 1 1 0 0
Big West 1 1–1 .500 1 0 0 0 0
Sun Belt 1 1–1 .500 1 0 0 0 0

Eighteen conferences went 0–1: America East, Atlantic 10, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, Horizon League, Ivy League, MAAC, MAC, Mid-Continent, MEAC, Northeast, Ohio Valley, Patriot League, Southern, Southland, SWAC, and WAC

All-Tournament team edit

Game officials edit

  • Dennis DeMayo (semifinal)
  • Barb Smith (semifinal)
  • Bryan Enterline (semifinal)
  • Sally Bell (semifinal)
  • Lawson Newton (semifinal)
  • Angie Lewis (semifinal)
  • Scott Yarbrough (final)
  • Melissa Barlow (final)
  • Lisa Mattingly (final) [7]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Jauss, Bill (March 26, 2002). "Huskies flying behind Bird - Connecticut nears perfection". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  2. ^ Kent, Milton (March 30, 2002). "Okla. rockets by Duke, 86-71". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  3. ^ Kent, Milton (March 30, 2002). "No. 1 UConn stays perfect, thumps Tenn". The Baltimore Sun. Tribune Company. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  4. ^ TERRY, MIKE (March 30, 2002). "Huskies Remove Suspense". Los Angeles Times. Tribune Company. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  5. ^ TERRY, MIKE (April 1, 2002). "Huskies Remove Suspense". Los Angeles Times. Tribune Company. Retrieved May 29, 2013.
  6. ^ "Iowa draws 55,646 to set record for women's basketball game". ESPN.com. Associated Press. October 15, 2023. Retrieved October 16, 2023.
  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.

2002, ncaa, division, women, basketball, tournament, concluded, march, 2002, when, connecticut, national, title, final, four, held, alamodome, antonio, texas, march, 2002, uconn, coached, geno, auriemma, defeated, oklahoma, championship, game, 2002, ncaa, divi. The 2002 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament concluded on March 31 2002 when Connecticut won the national title The Final Four was held at the Alamodome in San Antonio Texas on March 29 31 2002 UConn coached by Geno Auriemma defeated Oklahoma 82 70 in the championship game 2002 NCAA Division Iwomen s basketball tournament2002 Final Four logoTeams64Finals siteAlamodomeSan Antonio TexasChampionsConnecticut Huskies 3rd title Runner upOklahoma Sooners 1st title game SemifinalistsTennessee Volunteers 13th Final Four Duke Blue Devils 2nd Final Four MOPSwin Cash Connecticut NCAA Division I women s tournaments 2001 2003 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 Region Milwaukee Wisconsin 9 2 Midwest Region Ames Iowa 9 3 West Region Boise Idaho 9 4 East Region Raleigh North Carolina 9 5 Final Four San Antonio Texas 10 Record by conference 11 All Tournament team 12 Game officials 13 See also 14 NotesNotable events editAfter wins in the first three rounds Connecticut faced Old Dominion in the Mideast regional finals The opening 16 minutes were described as near perfect as the Huskies hit over 90 of their shots 19 of 21 and too had a 49 28 lead That 21 point margin would match the final margin as the Huskies would move on to the Final Four Sue Bird scored 26 points a career high and eleven assist The team recorded 25 assists which brought their season total to 811 a new NCAA season record 1 In the other three regions all the number one seeds Tennessee Oklahoma and Duke all advanced to the Final Four A dozen years earlier Oklahoma attempted to eliminate the women s basketball program but now the program had advanced to their first final four and faced Duke in one semifinal game Duke opened the game with a 13 7 run but the Sooners responded with 12 consecutive points Oklahoma managed to get to a 17 point lead in the second half but Duke cut the lead to only two points with just under eight minutes to go Oklahoma responded with a 16 3 run to take a decisive lead and won the game 86 71 to head to the national championship game 2 In the other semifinal UConn faced Tennessee Although Tennessee scored first but that would be the last time they would lead The Huskies responded opened up an early lead and extended it to 13 points at halftime Connecticut extended the lead in the beginning of the second half with a 24 11 run and went on to hold the Lady Vols to 31 shooting No Tennessee player scored in double digits Kara Lawson led the team with nine points The win extended the perfect season by Connecticut to 38 games while marking the fourth time in the last five meetings that the Huskies had beaten the Lady Vols 3 4 In the championship game the Sooners were out rebounded and outshot but did not give up Oklahoma did not give up a single three point shot the first time that has occurred in an NCAA title game and the last time that would happen to the Connecticut team in any game for over a decade With a minute and a half to go the Huskies held a lead but only six points UConn had the ball and despite having four seniors on the floor who would go 1 2 4 and 6 in the 2002 WNBA Draft gave the ball to sophomore Diana Taurasi who backed down Oklahoma s Stacy Dales then took a turn around jumper than went in while Dales fouled Taurasi to foul out of the game Taurasi hit the foul shot to extend the lead to nine points and the Huskies would go on to be the first team in history to record two undefeated seasons winning their third national championship 5 The championship game attendance of 29 619 set the still standing attendance record for an official game in women s basketball history A 2023 exhibition between Iowa and DePaul held at Kinnick Stadium home to Iowa football had an attendance of 55 646 6 Tournament records editFewest turnovers Louisiana Tech committed only three turnovers in the East regional first round game against UC Santa Barbara setting the record for fewest turnovers in an NCAA tournament game Unfortunately for the Lady Techsters the low number of turnovers could not prevent UCSB from winning Free throws Sue Bird hit 20 free throws out of 20 attempts one of several players to hit 100 of their free throws in an NCAA tournament 20 is the largest such total Assists Connecticut recorded 128 assists setting the record for most assists in an NCAA tournament Blocks Connecticut recorded 53 blocks setting the record for blocks in an NCAA tournament 7 Qualifying teams automatic editSixty four teams were selected to participate in the 2002 NCAA Tournament Thirty one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2002 NCAA tournament 7 Automatic Bids Record Qualifying School Conference Regular Season Conference SeedArizona State University Pac 10 24 8 12 6 9Austin Peay State University Ohio Valley Conference 19 11 9 7 15Bucknell University Patriot League 21 9 11 3 15Brigham Young University Mountain West 22 8 10 4 11University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Southern Conference 23 7 14 4 13University of Cincinnati Conference USA 26 4 11 3 6University of Connecticut Big East 33 0 16 0 1Creighton University Missouri Valley Conference 24 6 16 2 12Duke University ACC 27 3 16 0 1Florida International University Sun Belt Conference 26 5 13 1 5Georgia State University Atlantic Sun Conference 21 9 14 6 15University of Wisconsin Green Bay Horizon League 24 6 15 1 13University of Hartford America East 16 14 9 7 16Harvard University Ivy League 22 5 13 1 13Indiana University Bloomington Big Ten 17 13 8 8 9Kent State University MAC 20 10 13 3 14Liberty University Big South Conference 23 7 13 1 14Louisiana Tech University WAC 25 4 17 1 5Norfolk State University MEAC 22 8 13 5 16Oakland University Mid Continent 17 13 8 6 16University of Oklahoma Big 12 27 3 14 2 1Old Dominion University Colonial 25 5 18 0 7Pepperdine University West Coast Conference 23 7 11 3 8Southern University SWAC 26 4 17 1 14Saint Francis University Northeast Conference 19 11 14 4 16Saint Peter s College MAAC 25 5 15 3 11Stephen F Austin State University Southland 24 5 19 1 13Temple University Atlantic 10 20 10 12 4 14University of California Santa Barbara Big West Conference 25 5 16 0 12Vanderbilt University SEC 27 6 10 4 1Weber State University Big Sky Conference 22 8 11 3 15Qualifying 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 SeedUniversity of Arkansas Southeastern 19 11 7 7 6Baylor University Big 12 26 5 12 4 2Boston College Big East 23 7 12 4 5Clemson University Atlantic Coast 17 11 9 7 11University of Colorado Boulder Big 12 21 9 11 5 3Colorado State University Mountain West 24 6 12 2 7Drake University Missouri Valley 23 7 15 3 7University of Florida Southeastern 18 10 8 6 6University of Georgia Southeastern 19 10 6 8 10University of Iowa Big Ten 17 10 10 6 9Iowa State University Big 12 23 8 9 7 3Kansas State University Big 12 24 7 11 5 3Louisiana State University Southeastern 17 11 8 6 6University of Minnesota Big Ten 21 7 11 5 5Mississippi State University Southeastern 18 11 8 6 12University of New Mexico Mountain West 22 8 10 4 10University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Atlantic Coast 24 8 11 5 4University of Notre Dame Big East 19 9 13 3 7Pennsylvania State University Big Ten 21 11 11 5 4Purdue University Big Ten 23 5 13 3 2Santa Clara University West Coast 21 9 9 5 11University of South Carolina Southeastern 22 6 10 4 3Stanford University Pacific 10 30 2 18 0 2Syracuse University Big East 18 12 9 7 10Texas Christian University Conference USA 23 6 12 2 8University of Tennessee Southeastern 25 4 13 1 2University of Texas at Austin Big 12 20 9 10 6 4Texas Tech University Big 12 18 11 8 8 4Tulane University Conference USA 23 10 8 6 10University of Nevada Las Vegas Mountain West 23 7 9 5 12Villanova University Big East 19 10 12 4 9University of Virginia Atlantic Coast 17 12 9 7 8University of Wisconsin Madison Big Ten 19 11 8 8 8Bids by conference editThirty one conferences earned an automatic bid In twenty one cases the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference Thirty three additional at large teams were selected from ten of the conferences 7 Bids Conference Teams8 Southeastern Vanderbilt Arkansas Florida Georgia LSU Mississippi St South Carolina Tennessee7 Big 12 Oklahoma Baylor Colorado Iowa St Kansas St Texas Texas Tech6 Big Ten Indiana Iowa Minnesota Penn St Purdue Wisconsin5 Big East Connecticut Boston College Notre Dame Syracuse Villanova4 Atlantic Coast Duke Clemson North Carolina Virginia4 Mountain West BYU Colorado St New Mexico UNLV3 Conference USA Cincinnati TCU Tulane2 Missouri Valley Creighton Drake2 Pacific 10 Arizona St Stanford2 West Coast Pepperdine Santa Clara1 America East Hartford1 Atlantic 10 Temple1 Atlantic Sun Georgia St 1 Big Sky Weber St 1 Big South Liberty1 Big West UC Santa Barb 1 Colonial Old Dominion1 Horizon Green Bay1 Ivy Harvard1 Metro Atlantic St Peter s 1 Mid American Kent St 1 Mid Continent Oakland1 Mid Eastern Norfolk St 1 Northeast St Francis Pa 1 Ohio Valley Austin Peay1 Patriot Bucknell1 Southern Chattanooga1 Southland Stephen F Austin1 Southwestern Southern U 1 Sun Belt FIU1 Western Athletic Louisiana TechFirst and second rounds edit nbsp nbsp Austin nbsp Durham nbsp Waco nbsp Columbia nbsp West Lafayette nbsp Storrs nbsp University Park nbsp Manhattan nbsp Chapel Hill nbsp Knoxville nbsp Nashville nbsp Ames nbsp Norman nbsp Boulder nbsp Stanford nbsp Lubbockclass notpageimage 2002 NCAA NCAA first and second round venues In 2002 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 all cases the higher seed accepted the opportunity 8 The 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 Texas at Austin Frank Erwin Center Austin TexasEast 1 amp 2 Duke University Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North CarolinaEast 1 amp 2 Baylor University Ferrell Center Waco TexasEast 1 amp 2 University of South Carolina Carolina Coliseum Columbia South CarolinaMideast 1 amp 2 Purdue University Mackey Arena West Lafayette IndianaMideast 1 amp 2 University of Connecticut Harry A Gampel Pavilion Storrs ConnecticutMideast 1 amp 2 Pennsylvania State University Bryce Jordan Center University Park PennsylvaniaMideast 1 amp 2 Kansas State University Bramlage Coliseum Manhattan KansasMidwest 1 amp 2 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Carmichael Auditorium Chapel Hill North CarolinaMidwest 1 amp 2 University of Tennessee Thompson Boling Arena Knoxville TennesseeMidwest 1 amp 2 Vanderbilt University Memorial Gymnasium Nashville TennesseeMidwest 1 amp 2 Iowa State University Hilton Coliseum Ames IowaWest 1 amp 2 University of Oklahoma Lloyd Noble Center Norman OklahomaWest 1 amp 2 University of Colorado Boulder CU Events Center Coors Events Center Boulder ColoradoWest 1 amp 2 Stanford University Maples Pavilion Stanford CaliforniaWest 1 amp 2 Texas Tech University United Spirit Arena Lubbock TexasRegionals and Final Four edit nbsp nbsp Ames nbsp Raleigh nbsp Milwaukee nbsp Boise nbsp San Antonioclass notpageimage 2002 NCAA regionals and Final Four The Regionals named for the general location were held from March 23 to March 25 at these sites Midwest Regional Hilton Coliseum Ames Iowa Host Iowa State University East Regional PNC Arena Raleigh North Carolina Host North Carolina State University Mideast Regional U S Cellular Arena Milwaukee Wisconsin Host Marquette University West Regional Taco Bell Arena Boise Idaho Host Boise State University Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held March 29 and March 31 in San Antonio Texas at the Alamodome Host University of Texas at San Antonio Bids by state editThe sixty four teams came from thirty states Texas had the most teams with five bids Twenty states did not have any teams receiving bids 7 nbsp NCAA Women s basketball Tournament invitations by state 2002Bids State Teams5 Texas Stephen F Austin Baylor TCU Texas Texas Tech4 California Pepperdine UC Santa Barb Santa Clara Stanford4 Louisiana Louisiana Tech Southern U LSU Tulane4 Pennsylvania Bucknell Temple Penn St Villanova4 Tennessee Austin Peay Chattanooga Vanderbilt Tennessee4 Virginia Liberty Norfolk St Old Dominion Virginia3 Indiana Indiana Notre Dame Purdue3 Iowa Drake Iowa Iowa St 2 Colorado Colorado Colorado St 2 Connecticut Connecticut Hartford2 Florida FIU Florida2 Georgia Georgia St Georgia2 Massachusetts Harvard Boston College2 New York St Francis Pa Syracuse2 North Carolina Duke North Carolina2 Ohio Cincinnati Kent St 2 South Carolina Clemson South Carolina2 Utah BYU Weber St 2 Wisconsin Green Bay Wisconsin1 Arizona Arizona St 1 Arkansas Arkansas1 Kansas Kansas St 1 Michigan Oakland1 Minnesota Minnesota1 Mississippi Mississippi St 1 Nebraska Creighton1 Nevada UNLV1 New Jersey St Peter s 1 New Mexico New Mexico1 Oklahoma OklahomaBrackets editData Source 9 Denotes overtime period Mideast Region Milwaukee Wisconsin edit First roundSecond roundRegional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1at Connecticut8616St Francis PA 371Connecticut869Iowa488Virginia629Iowa691Connecticut824Penn State645Florida International7312Creighton585Florida International794Penn State964at Penn State8213Chattanooga671Connecticut857Old Dominion646Arkansas7811Clemson686Arkansas683Kansas State823at Kansas State9314Kent State653Kansas State627Old Dominion827Old Dominion6810Georgia547Old Dominion742Purdue70 2at Purdue8015Austin Peay49Midwest Region Ames Iowa edit First roundSecond roundRegional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1at Vanderbilt6316Oakland381Vanderbilt619Arizona State358Wisconsin709Arizona State731Vanderbilt704North Carolina615Minnesota7112UNLV545Minnesota694North Carolina724at North Carolina8513Harvard581Vanderbilt632Tennessee686Florida5211BYU9011BYU753Iowa State693at Iowa State7214Temple5711BYU572Tennessee687Notre Dame7110New Mexico617Notre Dame502Tennessee892at Tennessee9815Georgia State68West Region Boise Idaho edit First roundSecond roundRegional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1at Oklahoma8416Hartford521Oklahoma669Villanova538Pepperdine469Villanova671Oklahoma724Texas Tech625Boston College5912Mississippi State6512Mississippi State554Texas Tech774at Texas Tech8413Stephen F Austin631Oklahoma943Colorado606LSU8411Santa Clara786LSU583Colorado693at Colorado8814Southern613Colorado622Stanford597Colorado State6910Tulane7310Tulane552Stanford772at Stanford7615Weber State51East Region Raleigh North Carolina edit First roundSecond roundRegional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1at Duke9516Norfolk State481Duke768TCU668TCU559Indiana451Duke624Texas465Louisiana Tech5612UC Santa Barbara5712UC Santa Barbara604Texas764at Texas6013Green Bay551Duke773South Carolina686Cincinnati76 11St Peter s636Cincinnati563South Carolina753at South Carolina6914Liberty613South Carolina797Drake657Drake8710Syracuse697Drake762Baylor722at Baylor8015Bucknell56Final Four San Antonio Texas edit National semifinalsMarch 29National championshipMarch 31 ME1Connecticut79MW2Tennessee56ME1Connecticut82W1Oklahoma70W1Oklahoma86E1Duke71E East ME Mideast MW Midwest W WestRecord by conference editConference of Bids Record Win Round of 32 Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four Championship GameSoutheastern 8 13 8 619 6 3 3 1 0Big 12 7 16 7 696 7 5 2 1 1Big Ten 6 5 6 455 4 1 0 0 0Big East 5 8 4 667 3 1 1 1 1Atlantic Coast 4 6 4 600 2 2 1 1 0Mountain West 4 2 4 333 1 1 0 0 0Conference USA 3 3 3 500 3 0 0 0 0Pacific 10 2 3 2 600 2 1 0 0 0Missouri Valley 2 2 2 500 1 1 0 0 0West Coast 2 0 2 000 0 0 0 0 0Colonial 1 3 1 750 1 1 1 0 0Big West 1 1 1 500 1 0 0 0 0Sun Belt 1 1 1 500 1 0 0 0 0Eighteen conferences went 0 1 America East Atlantic 10 Atlantic Sun Big Sky Big South Horizon League Ivy League MAAC MAC Mid Continent MEAC Northeast Ohio Valley Patriot League Southern Southland SWAC and WACAll Tournament team editSwin Cash Connecticut Sue Bird Connecticut Asjha Jones Connecticut Stacey Dales Oklahoma Rosalind Ross Oklahoma 7 Game officials editDennis DeMayo semifinal Barb Smith semifinal Bryan Enterline semifinal Sally Bell semifinal Lawson Newton semifinal Angie Lewis semifinal Scott Yarbrough final Melissa Barlow final Lisa Mattingly final 7 See also editNCAA Women s Division I Basketball Championship 2002 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 2002 NAIA Division I men s basketball tournamentNotes edit Jauss Bill March 26 2002 Huskies flying behind Bird Connecticut nears perfection Chicago Tribune Retrieved May 29 2013 Kent Milton March 30 2002 Okla rockets by Duke 86 71 The Baltimore Sun Retrieved May 29 2013 Kent Milton March 30 2002 No 1 UConn stays perfect thumps Tenn The Baltimore Sun Tribune Company Retrieved May 29 2013 TERRY MIKE March 30 2002 Huskies Remove Suspense Los Angeles Times Tribune Company Retrieved May 29 2013 TERRY MIKE April 1 2002 Huskies Remove Suspense Los Angeles Times Tribune Company Retrieved May 29 2013 Iowa draws 55 646 to set record for women s basketball game ESPN com Associated Press October 15 2023 Retrieved October 16 2023 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 2002 NCAA Division I women 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1180607455, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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