fbpx
Wikipedia

2014 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 2014 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament was played in March and April 2014, with the Final Four played April 6–8.[1] The Ohio Valley Conference served as the host institution.[2] The Final Four was played at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee.[3][4][5]

2014 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Season2013–14
Teams64
Finals siteBridgestone Arena
Nashville, Tennessee
ChampionsUConn Huskies (9th title, 9th title game,
15th Final Four)
Runner-upNotre Dame Fighting Irish (4th title game,
6th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachGeno Auriemma (9th title)
MOPBreanna Stewart (UConn)

Tennessee continued its streak of making every NCAA women's basketball tournament at 33 consecutive appearances. Connecticut (who made their seventh consecutive Final Four overall) and Notre Dame faced each other in the NCAA Final. Both were undefeated heading into the championship game, making it the first ever match up of two undefeated teams in the championship game. Connecticut prevailed, 79–58, to win their ninth national championship.

The previous day, Connecticut also won the men's tournament. It was just the second time in NCAA history the same school had won both the men's and women's tournament; UConn first accomplished that feat in 2004.[6]

Tournament procedure edit

Pending any changes to the format, a total of 64 teams will enter the 2014 tournament. 32 automatic bids shall be awarded to each program that wins their conference's tournament. The remaining 36 bids are "at-large", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. The tournament is split into four regional tournaments, and each regional has teams seeded from 1 to 16, with the committee ostensibly making every region as comparable to the others as possible.[citation needed] The top-seeded team in each region plays the #16 team, the #2 team plays the #15, etc. (meaning where the two seeds add up to 17, that team will be assigned to play another).

The basis for the subregionals returned to the approach used between 1982 and 2002; the top sixteen teams, as chosen in the bracket selection process, hosted the first two rounds on campus.

The Selection Committee will also seed the entire field from 1 to 64.

2014 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues edit

There were 64 teams in the tournament, placed in a seeded bracket with four regions. Thirty-two teams received automatic bids – thirty-one of which were their conference tournament champions; the other was for the Ivy League regular-season champion. An additional 32 teams were given at-large bids by the selection committee on the basis of their body of work during the regular season. Unlike the Men's Tournament, there was no "First Four" round.

First and Second rounds (Subregionals)

The subregionals were played from March 22 to March 25, 2014.[7] Sites chosen to host first- and second-round games in 2014 were:

 
Ames
Baton Rouge
Chapel Hill
College Park
College Station
Durham
Iowa City
Knoxville
Lexington
Los Angeles
Seattle
Storrs
Toledo
University Park
Waco
West Lafayette
class=notpageimage|
2014 NCAA subregionals (Hover over city to see link to Host)

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

 
Lincoln
Louisville
Notre Dame
Stanford
Nashville
class=notpageimage|
2014 NCAA Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red) (Hover over city to see link to arena)

The Regionals, named for the city rather than the region of geographic importance since 2005, were held from March 29 to April 1 at the following sites:[8][9]

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and national championship)

It was the first time that Nashville had hosted a Women's Final Four Basketball tournament.[10]

Tournament records edit

  • Team rebound margin—Notre Dame out rebounded Maryland 50 to 21; the margin of 29 is the largest margin in Final Four history
  • Assists—Connecticut recorded 25 assists in the Championship game against Notre Dame, the most ever recorded in a Final Four game since the NCAA began recording assists in 1985.[11]
  • Oklahoma scored 66 points in the second half of a first-round game against DePaul, the most points scored in a half of an NCAA tournament game, but lost to DePaul 104–100.[12]

Automatic qualifiers edit

The following teams earned automatic qualifiers for the 2014 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion receives the automatic bid):

Conference Team Appearances Last bid
ACC Notre Dame 21 2013
America East Albany 3 2013
American Connecticut 26 2013
Atlantic 10 Fordham 2 1994
Atlantic Sun Florida Gulf Coast 2 2012
Big 12 Baylor 13 2013
Big East DePaul 19 2013
Big Sky North Dakota 1 Never
Big South Winthrop 1 Never
Big Ten Nebraska 12 2013
Big West Cal State Northridge 2 1999
Colonial James Madison 10 2011
C-USA Middle Tennessee 17 2013
Horizon Wright State 1 Never
Ivy League Penn 3 2004
MAAC Marist 10 2013
MAC Akron 1 Never
MEAC Hampton 8 2013
Missouri Valley Wichita State 2 2013
Mountain West Fresno State 7 2013
Northeast Robert Morris 3 2008
Ohio Valley Tennessee-Martin 4 2013
Pac-12 USC 16 2006
Patriot Army 2 2006
SEC Tennessee 33 2013
Southern Chattanooga 12 2013
Southland Northwestern State 3 2004
SWAC Prairie View A&M 6 2013
Summit South Dakota 1 Never
Sun Belt Western Kentucky 17 2008
West Coast Gonzaga 7 2013
WAC Idaho 3 2013

Tournament seeds edit

Lincoln Regional Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Connecticut American 34–0 Automatic
2 Duke ACC 27–6 At-large
3 Texas A&M SEC 24–8 At-large
4 Nebraska Big Ten 25–6 Automatic
5 NC State ACC 25–7 At-large
6 Gonzaga West Coast 29–4 Automatic
7 DePaul Big East 27–6 Automatic
8 Georgia SEC 20–11 At-large
9 St. Joseph's Atlantic 10 22–9 At-large
10 Oklahoma Big 12 18–14 At-large
11 James Madison Colonial 28–5 Automatic
12 BYU West Coast 26–6 At-large
13 Fresno State Mountain West 22–10 Automatic
14 North Dakota Big Sky 22–9 Automatic
15 Winthrop Big South 24–8 Automatic
16 Prairie View A&M SWAC 14–17 Automatic
Stanford Regional Maples Pavilion, Stanford, California
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 South Carolina SEC 27–4 At-large
2 Stanford Pac-12 29–3 At-large
3 Penn State Big Ten 22–7 At-large
4 North Carolina ACC 24–9 At-large
5 Michigan State Big Ten 22–9 At-large
6 Dayton Atlantic 10 23–7 At-large
7 Iowa State Big 12 20–10 At-large
8 Middle Tennessee State Conference USA 29–4 Automatic
9 Oregon State Pac-12 23–10 At-large
10 Florida State ACC 20–11 At-large
11 Florida SEC 19–12 At-large
12 Hampton MEAC 28–4 Automatic
13 Tennessee-Martin Ohio Valley 24–7 Automatic
14 Wichita State Missouri Valley 26–6 Automatic
15 South Dakota Summit 19–13 Automatic
16 Cal State Northridge Big West 18–14 Automatic
South Bend Regional Joyce Center, Notre Dame, Indiana
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Notre Dame ACC 32–0 Automatic
2 Baylor Big 12 29–4 Automatic
3 Kentucky SEC 24–8 At-large
4 Purdue Big Ten 21–8 At-large
5 Oklahoma State Big 12 23–8 At-large
6 Syracuse ACC 22–9 At-large
7 California Pac-12 21–9 At-large
8 Vanderbilt SEC 18–12 At-large
9 Arizona State Pac-12 22–9 At-large
10 Fordham Atlantic 10 25–7 Automatic
11 Chattanooga Southern 29–3 Automatic
12 Florida Gulf Coast Atlantic Sun 26–7 Automatic
13 Akron Mid-American 23–9 Automatic
14 Wright State Horizon 26–8 Automatic
15 Western Kentucky Sun Belt 24–8 Automatic
16 Robert Morris Northeast 21–11 Automatic
Louisville Regional KFC Yum! Center, Louisville, Kentucky
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Tennessee SEC 27–5 Automatic
2 West Virginia Big 12 29–4 At-large
3 Louisville American 30–4 At-large
4 Maryland ACC 24–6 At-large
5 Texas Big 12 21–11 At-large
6 Iowa Big Ten 26–8 At-large
7 LSU SEC 19–12 At-large
8 St. John's Big East 22–10 At-large
9 USC Pac-12 22–12 Automatic
10 Georgia Tech ACC 20–11 At-large
11 Marist MAAC 27–6 Automatic
12 Penn Ivy 22–6 Automatic
13 Army Patriot 25–7 Automatic
14 Idaho WAC 25–8 Automatic
15 Albany America East 28–4 Automatic
16 Northwestern State Southland 21–12 Automatic

Bracket edit

* – Denotes overtime period

Lincoln Regional edit

In their first round match DePaul and Oklahoma scored a combined 204 points, setting a tournament record for most points in a non-overtime game. Oklahoma's 66 second-half points was also a record a team in a single half.[13]

Connecticut vs. Prairie View A&M aired nationwide on ESPN. Connecticut vs. Saint Joseph's aired nationwide on ESPNU. All other games aired with whip-a-round or regional coverage on ESPN or ESPN2.

First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 UConn 87
16 Prairie View A&M 44
1 UConn 91
Storrs, Connecticut – Sun/Tue
9 St. Joseph's 52
8 Georgia 57
9 St. Joseph's 67
1 UConn 70
12 BYU 51
5 NC State 57
12 BYU 72
12 BYU 80
Los Angeles – Sat/Mon
4 Nebraska 76
4 Nebraska 74
13 Fresno State 55
1 UConn 69
3 Texas A&M 54
6 Gonzaga 63
11 James Madison 72
11 James Madison 69
College Station, Texas – Sun/Tue
3 Texas A&M 85
3 Texas A&M 70
14 North Dakota 55
3 Texas A&M 84
7 DePaul 65
7 DePaul 104
10 Oklahoma 100
7 DePaul 74
Durham, North Carolina – Sat/Mon
2 Duke 65
2 Duke 87
15 Winthrop 45

Notre Dame Regional edit

Notre Dame vs. Robert Morris aired nationwide on ESPN. Notre Dame vs. Arizona State aired nationwide on ESPNews. All other games aired with whip-a-round or regional coverage on ESPN or ESPN2.

First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 Notre Dame 93
16 Robert Morris 42
1 Notre Dame 84
Toledo, Ohio – Sat/Mon
9 Arizona State 67
8 Vanderbilt 61
9 Arizona State 69
1 Notre Dame 89
5 Oklahoma State 72
5 Oklahoma State 61*
12 Florida Gulf Coast 60
5 Oklahoma State 73
West Lafayette, Indiana – Sat/Mon
4 Purdue 66
4 Purdue 84
13 Akron 55
1 Notre Dame 88
2 Baylor 69
6 Syracuse 59
11 Chattanooga 53
6 Syracuse 59
Lexington, Kentucky – Sat/Mon
3 Kentucky 64
3 Kentucky 106
14 Wright State 60
3 Kentucky 72
2 Baylor 90
7 California 64
10 Fordham 63
7 California 56
Waco, Texas – Sat/Mon
2 Baylor 75
2 Baylor 87
15 Western Kentucky 74

Louisville Regional edit

First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 Tennessee 70
16 Northwestern State 46
1 Tennessee 67
Knoxville, Tennessee – Sat/Mon
8 St. John's 51
8 St. John's 71
9 USC 68
1 Tennessee 62
4 Maryland 73
5 Texas 79
12 Pennsylvania 61
5 Texas 64
College Park, Maryland – Sun/Tue
4 Maryland 69
4 Maryland 90
13 Army 52
4 Maryland 76
3 Louisville 73
6 Iowa 87
11 Marist 65
6 Iowa 53
Iowa City, Iowa – Sun/Tue
3 Louisville 83
3 Louisville 88
14 Idaho 42
3 Louisville 73
7 LSU 47
7 LSU 98
10 Georgia Tech 78
7 LSU 76
Baton Rouge, Louisiana – Sun/Tue
2 West Virginia 67
2 West Virginia 76
15 Albany 61

Stanford Regional edit

First round Second Round Regional semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 South Carolina 73
16 Cal. State Northridge 58
1 South Carolina 78
Seattle, Washington – Sun/Tue
9 Oregon State 69
8 Middle Tennessee 36
9 Oregon State 55
1 South Carolina 58
4 North Carolina 65
5 Michigan State 91
12 Hampton 61
5 Michigan State 53
Chapel Hill, North Carolina – Sun/Tue
4 North Carolina 62
4 North Carolina 60
13 Tennessee-Martin 58
4 North Carolina 65
2 Stanford 74
6 Dayton 69
11 Florida 83
11 Florida 61
University Park, Pennsylvania – Sun/Tue
3 Penn State 83
3 Penn State 62
14 Wichita State 56
3 Penn State 57
2 Stanford 82
7 Iowa State 44
10 Florida State 55
10 Florida State 44
Ames, Iowa – Sat/Mon
2 Stanford 63
2 Stanford 81
15 South Dakota 62

Final Four – Nashville, Tennessee edit

National semifinals
April 6
National Championship Game
April 8
      
LI1 UConn 75
S2 Stanford 56
LI1 UConn 79
ND1 Notre Dame 58
ND1 Notre Dame 87
LO4 Maryland 61

Final Four summaries edit

ESPN
April 6, 2014
5:30 pm CDT
Recap
#4 Maryland Terrapins 61, #1 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 87
Scoring by half: 31-48, 30-39
Pts: Brionna Jones 16
Rebs: Alyssa Thomas 6
Asts: Lexie Brown 8
Pts: Kayla McBride 28
Rebs: Jewell Loyd, Markisha Wright 9
Asts: Lindsay Allen 5
Bridgestone Arena – Nashville, Tennessee
Attendance: 17,548
Referees: Scott Yarbrough, Cameron Inouye, Mike Price
ESPN
April 6, 2014
8:00 pm CDT
Recap
#2 Stanford Cardinal 56, #1 Connecticut Huskies 75
Scoring by half: 24-28, 32-47
Pts: Amber Orrange 16
Rebs: Chiney Ogwumike 10
Asts: Amber Orrange 5
Pts: Breanna Stewart 18
Rebs: Breanna Stewart, Stefanie Dolson 7
Asts: Moriah Jefferson, Bria Hartley 4
Bridgestone Arena – Nashville, Tennessee
Attendance: 17,548
Referees: Tina Napier, Joe Vaszily, Chuck Gonzales

National championship edit

ESPN
April 8, 2014
7:30 pm CDT
Recap
#1 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 58, #1 Connecticut Huskies 79
Scoring by half: 38-45, 20-34
Pts: Kayla McBride 21
Rebs: Jewell Loyd 6
Asts: Lindsay Allen 5
Pts: Breanna Stewart 21
Rebs: Stefanie Dolson 16
Asts: Stefanie Dolson, Moriah Jefferson 7
Bridgestone Arena – Nashville, Tennessee
Attendance: 17,570
Referees: Dee Kantner, Lisa Mattingly, Denise Brooks
 
Final Four in Nashville

Undefeated Connecticut faced undefeated Notre Dame in the final game, the first ever to feature two undefeated teams. After a hard-fought first half, the Connecticut Huskies pulled away in the second for a 79–58 victory. National Player of the Year Breanna Stewart scored 21 points for Connecticut. Stefanie Dolson added 17 points and 16 rebounds for the victors. Kayla McBride had 21 points for the Notre Dame Irish. Connecticut won the rebound battle 54–31 and held Notre Dame to a season low in points. After the game, Notre Dame coach Muffet McGraw said "I thought we were playing the Miami Heat for a while [Connecticut is] just that good."[6]

By winning, Connecticut moved to 40–0 on the season and claimed their ninth title, surpassing Tennessee's eight titles for the most all-time. Coach Geno Auriemma said he was "flattered and grateful and all the things that come with this kind of accomplishment ... I'm more proud of the legacy that exists and what Connecticut basketball is as opposed to the number of championships."[6] All nine of the school's titles, five with unbeaten records, have come during Auriemma's twenty seasons as head coach. Connecticut became the second school to finish the year 40–0, the other being Baylor. They have now won 46 consecutive games, the third most in NCAA history, but well short of their NCAA record of 90.[6]

For Notre Dame, it was their third loss in the title game in the last four years. They were inhibited by the loss of senior starter Natalie Achonwa to injury in the Regional Final. The Irish had won seven of the previous nine meeting between the two powerhouses. However, Connecticut beat them during the tournament for the second consecutive year, having eliminated them in the Final Four in 2013.[6]

All-Tournament team edit

  • Breanna Stewart, Connecticut
  • Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis, Connecticut
  • Stefanie Dolson, Connecticut
  • Kayla McBride, Notre Dame
  • Jewell Loyd, Notre Dame[11]

Game Officials edit

  • Chuck Gonzalez (semifinal)
  • Cameron Inouye (semifinal)
  • Tina Napier (semifinal)
  • Mike Price (semifinal)
  • Joe Vaszily (semifinal)
  • Scott Yarbrough (semifinal)
  • Denise Brooks (final)
  • Dee Kanter (final)
  • Joe Vasily (Standby)
  • Lisa Mattingly (final)[11]

Record by conference edit

Source[14]

Conference Bids Record Win % R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NC
American 2 9–1 0.900 2 2 2 2 1 1 1
ACC 8 15–8 0.652 8 6 3 3 2 1
Big East 2 3–2 0.600 2 2 1
SEC 8 12–8 0.600 8 6 5 1
Pac-12 5 7–5 0.583 5 4 1 1 1
Big Ten 5 6–5 0.545 5 5 1
Big 12 6 7–6 0.538 6 4 2 1
West Coast 2 2–2 0.500 2 1 1
Colonial 1 1–1 0.500 1 1
Atlantic 10 3 1–3 0.250 3 1
  • The R64, R32, S16, E8, F4, CG, and NC columns indicate how many teams from each conference were in the round of 64 (first round), round of 32 (second round), Sweet 16, Elite Eight, Final Four, championship game, and national champion, respectively.
  • The America East, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, Big West, Conference USA, Horizon, Ivy, MEAC, Metro Atlantic, Mid-American (MAC), Missouri Valley, Mountain West, Northeast, Ohio Valley, Patriot, Southern, Southland, Sun Belt, SWAC, and WAC conferences each had one representative that was eliminated in the first round.

Media coverage edit

Television edit

ESPN had US television rights to all games during the tournament.[15] For the first and second round, ESPN aired select games nationally on ESPN, ESPNU, or ESPNews. All other games aired regionally on ESPN or ESPN2 and streamed online via ESPN3. Most of the nation got whip-a-round coverage during this time, which allowed ESPN to rotate between the games and focus the nation on the one that has the closest score. The regional semifinals were split between ESPN and ESPN2, and ESPN aired the regional finals, national semifinals, and championship match.[16]

Studio host & analysts edit

Broadcast assignments edit

Radio edit

Westwood One had nationwide broadcast and streaming radio rights from the regional finals on through the championship.[17] The teams participating in the Regional Finals, Final Four, and championship were allowed to have their own local broadcasts, but were not allowed to stream their broadcast online.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "2014 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Final Four". Ohio Valley Conference. Retrieved November 21, 2009.
  2. ^ "Nashville, Ohio Valley Conference to host 2014 NCAA Women's Basketball Final Four". Tennessee Tech Athletics. November 16, 2008. Retrieved November 21, 2009.
  3. ^ . NewsChannel 5.com. Archived from the original on February 24, 2012. Retrieved November 21, 2009.
  4. ^ "NASHVILLE LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE (NLOC) ANNOUNCES IT HAS REACHED HALF-WAY MARK OF FUNDRAISING GOAL". Nashville Sports Council. Retrieved April 11, 2012.
  5. ^ a b . Archived from the original on March 17, 2011. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
  6. ^ a b c d e Doug Feinberg (April 8, 2014). "UConn Women's Basketball Team Routs Notre Dame To Finish 40-0 Season, Win Historic 9th Title". Huffington Post. Retrieved April 11, 2014.
  7. ^ . NCAA. Archived from the original on October 7, 2014. Retrieved March 13, 2014.
  8. ^ "Four to Host N.C.A.A. Women's Regionals". New York Times. October 9, 2013. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  9. ^ "Host sites selected for preliminary rounds of the 2014 championship". NCAA. October 9, 2013. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  10. ^ "Nashville to host 2014 Women's Final Four". WKRN.com. Retrieved November 21, 2009.
  11. ^ a b c Nixon, Rick. "2016 Women's Final Four Record Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved May 1, 2016.
  12. ^ "NCAA Record books". NCAA.
  13. ^ "DePaul beats Oklahoma in highest-scoring regulation tourney game". ESPN. March 22, 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
  14. ^ "The Tournament Field" (PDF). NCAA Record books. (PDF) from the original on March 29, 2022.
  15. ^ Margolis, Rachel (December 15, 2011). "ESPN and NCAA® Extend Rights Agreement through 2023-24". ESPN. Retrieved December 15, 2011.
  16. ^ Margolis, Rachel (March 18, 2014). "ESPN Networks to Present Entire NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Championship". ESPN. Retrieved March 18, 2014.
  17. ^ . NCAA. January 13, 2011. Archived from the original on May 16, 2013. Retrieved May 12, 2013.
  18. ^ a b "2014 NCAA Women's Division 1 Tournament Week 2 TV & National Radio schedule". Eye on Sky and Air Sports. March 26, 2014. Retrieved March 26, 2014.
  19. ^ a b "2014 NCAA Women's Division 1 Tournament Final Four/Championship TV & National Radio schedule". Eye on Sky and Air Sports. April 1, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2014.

2014, ncaa, division, women, basketball, tournament, played, march, april, 2014, with, final, four, played, april, ohio, valley, conference, served, host, institution, final, four, played, bridgestone, arena, nashville, tennessee, 2014, ncaa, division, iwomen,. The 2014 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament was played in March and April 2014 with the Final Four played April 6 8 1 The Ohio Valley Conference served as the host institution 2 The Final Four was played at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville Tennessee 3 4 5 2014 NCAA Division Iwomen s basketball tournamentSeason2013 14Teams64Finals siteBridgestone ArenaNashville TennesseeChampionsUConn Huskies 9th title 9th title game 15th Final Four Runner upNotre Dame Fighting Irish 4th title game 6th Final Four SemifinalistsStanford Cardinal 12th Final Four Maryland Terrapins 4th Final Four Winning coachGeno Auriemma 9th title MOPBreanna Stewart UConn NCAA Division I women s tournaments 2013 2015 Tennessee continued its streak of making every NCAA women s basketball tournament at 33 consecutive appearances Connecticut who made their seventh consecutive Final Four overall and Notre Dame faced each other in the NCAA Final Both were undefeated heading into the championship game making it the first ever match up of two undefeated teams in the championship game Connecticut prevailed 79 58 to win their ninth national championship The previous day Connecticut also won the men s tournament It was just the second time in NCAA history the same school had won both the men s and women s tournament UConn first accomplished that feat in 2004 6 Contents 1 Tournament procedure 2 2014 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues 3 Tournament records 4 Automatic qualifiers 4 1 Tournament seeds 5 Bracket 5 1 Lincoln Regional 5 2 Notre Dame Regional 5 3 Louisville Regional 5 4 Stanford Regional 5 5 Final Four Nashville Tennessee 5 5 1 Final Four summaries 5 5 2 National championship 6 All Tournament team 7 Game Officials 8 Record by conference 9 Media coverage 9 1 Television 9 1 1 Studio host amp analysts 9 1 2 Broadcast assignments 9 2 Radio 10 See also 11 NotesTournament procedure editFurther information NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament Current tournament format Pending any changes to the format a total of 64 teams will enter the 2014 tournament 32 automatic bids shall be awarded to each program that wins their conference s tournament The remaining 36 bids are at large with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee The tournament is split into four regional tournaments and each regional has teams seeded from 1 to 16 with the committee ostensibly making every region as comparable to the others as possible citation needed The top seeded team in each region plays the 16 team the 2 team plays the 15 etc meaning where the two seeds add up to 17 that team will be assigned to play another The basis for the subregionals returned to the approach used between 1982 and 2002 the top sixteen teams as chosen in the bracket selection process hosted the first two rounds on campus The Selection Committee will also seed the entire field from 1 to 64 2014 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues editThere were 64 teams in the tournament placed in a seeded bracket with four regions Thirty two teams received automatic bids thirty one of which were their conference tournament champions the other was for the Ivy League regular season champion An additional 32 teams were given at large bids by the selection committee on the basis of their body of work during the regular season Unlike the Men s Tournament there was no First Four round First and Second rounds Subregionals The subregionals were played from March 22 to March 25 2014 7 Sites chosen to host first and second round games in 2014 were nbsp nbsp Ames nbsp Baton Rouge nbsp Chapel Hill nbsp College Park nbsp College Station nbsp Durham nbsp Iowa City nbsp Knoxville nbsp Lexington nbsp Los Angeles nbsp Seattle nbsp Storrs nbsp Toledo nbsp University Park nbsp Waco nbsp West Lafayetteclass notpageimage 2014 NCAA subregionals Hover over city to see link to Host March 22 and 24 Hilton Coliseum Ames Iowa Host Iowa State Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North Carolina Host Duke Thompson Boling Arena Knoxville Tennessee Host Tennessee Memorial Coliseum Lexington Kentucky Host Kentucky Pauley Pavilion Los Angeles Host UCLA Savage Arena Toledo Ohio Host Toledo Ferrell Center Waco Texas Host Baylor Mackey Arena West Lafayette Indiana Host Purdue March 23 and 25 Pete Maravich Assembly Center Baton Rouge Louisiana Host LSU Carmichael Arena Chapel Hill North Carolina Host North Carolina Comcast Center College Park Maryland Host Maryland Reed Arena College Station Texas Host Texas A amp M Carver Hawkeye Arena Iowa City Iowa Host Iowa Alaska Airlines Arena Seattle Host Washington Harry A Gampel Pavilion Storrs Connecticut Host Connecticut Bryce Jordan Center University Park Pennsylvania Host Penn State Regional semifinals and finals Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight nbsp nbsp Lincoln nbsp Louisville nbsp Notre Dame nbsp Stanford nbsp Nashvilleclass notpageimage 2014 NCAA Regionals blue and Final Four red Hover over city to see link to arena The Regionals named for the city rather than the region of geographic importance since 2005 were held from March 29 to April 1 at the following sites 8 9 March 29 and 31 Lincoln Regional Pinnacle Bank Arena Lincoln Nebraska Host Nebraska South Bend Regional Joyce Center Notre Dame Indiana Host Notre Dame March 30 and April 1 Louisville Regional KFC Yum Center Louisville Kentucky Host Louisville Stanford Regional Maples Pavilion Stanford California Host Stanford National semifinals and championship Final Four and national championship April 6 amp 8 Bridgestone Arena Nashville Tennessee Hosts Southeastern Conference Ohio Valley Conference and Belmont University Vanderbilt University 5 It was the first time that Nashville had hosted a Women s Final Four Basketball tournament 10 Tournament records editTeam rebound margin Notre Dame out rebounded Maryland 50 to 21 the margin of 29 is the largest margin in Final Four history Assists Connecticut recorded 25 assists in the Championship game against Notre Dame the most ever recorded in a Final Four game since the NCAA began recording assists in 1985 11 Oklahoma scored 66 points in the second half of a first round game against DePaul the most points scored in a half of an NCAA tournament game but lost to DePaul 104 100 12 Automatic qualifiers editFurther information 2014 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament qualifying teams The following teams earned automatic qualifiers for the 2014 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference s tournament except for the Ivy League whose regular season champion receives the automatic bid Conference Team Appearances Last bid ACC Notre Dame 21 2013 America East Albany 3 2013 American Connecticut 26 2013 Atlantic 10 Fordham 2 1994 Atlantic Sun Florida Gulf Coast 2 2012 Big 12 Baylor 13 2013 Big East DePaul 19 2013 Big Sky North Dakota 1 Never Big South Winthrop 1 Never Big Ten Nebraska 12 2013 Big West Cal State Northridge 2 1999 Colonial James Madison 10 2011 C USA Middle Tennessee 17 2013 Horizon Wright State 1 Never Ivy League Penn 3 2004 MAAC Marist 10 2013 MAC Akron 1 Never MEAC Hampton 8 2013 Missouri Valley Wichita State 2 2013 Mountain West Fresno State 7 2013 Northeast Robert Morris 3 2008 Ohio Valley Tennessee Martin 4 2013 Pac 12 USC 16 2006 Patriot Army 2 2006 SEC Tennessee 33 2013 Southern Chattanooga 12 2013 Southland Northwestern State 3 2004 SWAC Prairie View A amp M 6 2013 Summit South Dakota 1 Never Sun Belt Western Kentucky 17 2008 West Coast Gonzaga 7 2013 WAC Idaho 3 2013 Tournament seeds edit Lincoln Regional Pinnacle Bank Arena Lincoln Nebraska Seed School Conference Record Berth type 1 Connecticut American 34 0 Automatic 2 Duke ACC 27 6 At large 3 Texas A amp M SEC 24 8 At large 4 Nebraska Big Ten 25 6 Automatic 5 NC State ACC 25 7 At large 6 Gonzaga West Coast 29 4 Automatic 7 DePaul Big East 27 6 Automatic 8 Georgia SEC 20 11 At large 9 St Joseph s Atlantic 10 22 9 At large 10 Oklahoma Big 12 18 14 At large 11 James Madison Colonial 28 5 Automatic 12 BYU West Coast 26 6 At large 13 Fresno State Mountain West 22 10 Automatic 14 North Dakota Big Sky 22 9 Automatic 15 Winthrop Big South 24 8 Automatic 16 Prairie View A amp M SWAC 14 17 Automatic Stanford Regional Maples Pavilion Stanford California Seed School Conference Record Berth type 1 South Carolina SEC 27 4 At large 2 Stanford Pac 12 29 3 At large 3 Penn State Big Ten 22 7 At large 4 North Carolina ACC 24 9 At large 5 Michigan State Big Ten 22 9 At large 6 Dayton Atlantic 10 23 7 At large 7 Iowa State Big 12 20 10 At large 8 Middle Tennessee State Conference USA 29 4 Automatic 9 Oregon State Pac 12 23 10 At large 10 Florida State ACC 20 11 At large 11 Florida SEC 19 12 At large 12 Hampton MEAC 28 4 Automatic 13 Tennessee Martin Ohio Valley 24 7 Automatic 14 Wichita State Missouri Valley 26 6 Automatic 15 South Dakota Summit 19 13 Automatic 16 Cal State Northridge Big West 18 14 Automatic South Bend Regional Joyce Center Notre Dame Indiana Seed School Conference Record Berth type 1 Notre Dame ACC 32 0 Automatic 2 Baylor Big 12 29 4 Automatic 3 Kentucky SEC 24 8 At large 4 Purdue Big Ten 21 8 At large 5 Oklahoma State Big 12 23 8 At large 6 Syracuse ACC 22 9 At large 7 California Pac 12 21 9 At large 8 Vanderbilt SEC 18 12 At large 9 Arizona State Pac 12 22 9 At large 10 Fordham Atlantic 10 25 7 Automatic 11 Chattanooga Southern 29 3 Automatic 12 Florida Gulf Coast Atlantic Sun 26 7 Automatic 13 Akron Mid American 23 9 Automatic 14 Wright State Horizon 26 8 Automatic 15 Western Kentucky Sun Belt 24 8 Automatic 16 Robert Morris Northeast 21 11 Automatic Louisville Regional KFC Yum Center Louisville Kentucky Seed School Conference Record Berth type 1 Tennessee SEC 27 5 Automatic 2 West Virginia Big 12 29 4 At large 3 Louisville American 30 4 At large 4 Maryland ACC 24 6 At large 5 Texas Big 12 21 11 At large 6 Iowa Big Ten 26 8 At large 7 LSU SEC 19 12 At large 8 St John s Big East 22 10 At large 9 USC Pac 12 22 12 Automatic 10 Georgia Tech ACC 20 11 At large 11 Marist MAAC 27 6 Automatic 12 Penn Ivy 22 6 Automatic 13 Army Patriot 25 7 Automatic 14 Idaho WAC 25 8 Automatic 15 Albany America East 28 4 Automatic 16 Northwestern State Southland 21 12 AutomaticBracket edit Denotes overtime period Lincoln Regional edit In their first round match DePaul and Oklahoma scored a combined 204 points setting a tournament record for most points in a non overtime game Oklahoma s 66 second half points was also a record a team in a single half 13 Connecticut vs Prairie View A amp M aired nationwide on ESPN Connecticut vs Saint Joseph s aired nationwide on ESPNU All other games aired with whip a round or regional coverage on ESPN or ESPN2 First roundSecond RoundRegional semifinalsRegional Finals 1UConn8716Prairie View A amp M441UConn91Storrs Connecticut Sun Tue9St Joseph s528Georgia579St Joseph s671UConn7012BYU515NC State5712BYU7212BYU80Los Angeles Sat Mon4Nebraska764Nebraska7413Fresno State551UConn693Texas A amp M546Gonzaga6311James Madison7211James Madison69College Station Texas Sun Tue3Texas A amp M853Texas A amp M7014North Dakota553Texas A amp M847DePaul657DePaul10410Oklahoma1007DePaul74Durham North Carolina Sat Mon2Duke652Duke8715Winthrop45 Notre Dame Regional edit Notre Dame vs Robert Morris aired nationwide on ESPN Notre Dame vs Arizona State aired nationwide on ESPNews All other games aired with whip a round or regional coverage on ESPN or ESPN2 First roundSecond RoundRegional semifinalsRegional Finals 1Notre Dame9316Robert Morris421Notre Dame84Toledo Ohio Sat Mon9Arizona State678Vanderbilt619Arizona State691Notre Dame895Oklahoma State725Oklahoma State61 12Florida Gulf Coast605Oklahoma State73West Lafayette Indiana Sat Mon4Purdue664Purdue8413Akron551Notre Dame882Baylor696Syracuse5911Chattanooga536Syracuse59Lexington Kentucky Sat Mon3Kentucky643Kentucky10614Wright State603Kentucky722Baylor907California6410Fordham637California56Waco Texas Sat Mon2Baylor752Baylor8715Western Kentucky74 Louisville Regional edit First roundSecond RoundRegional semifinalsRegional Finals 1Tennessee7016Northwestern State461Tennessee67Knoxville Tennessee Sat Mon8St John s518St John s719USC681Tennessee624Maryland735Texas7912Pennsylvania615Texas64College Park Maryland Sun Tue4Maryland694Maryland9013Army524Maryland763Louisville736Iowa8711Marist656Iowa53Iowa City Iowa Sun Tue3Louisville833Louisville8814Idaho423Louisville737LSU477LSU9810Georgia Tech787LSU76Baton Rouge Louisiana Sun Tue2West Virginia672West Virginia7615Albany61 Stanford Regional edit First roundSecond RoundRegional semifinalsRegional Finals 1South Carolina7316Cal State Northridge581South Carolina78Seattle Washington Sun Tue9Oregon State698Middle Tennessee369Oregon State551South Carolina584North Carolina655Michigan State9112Hampton615Michigan State53Chapel Hill North Carolina Sun Tue4North Carolina624North Carolina6013Tennessee Martin584North Carolina652Stanford746Dayton6911Florida8311Florida61University Park Pennsylvania Sun Tue3Penn State833Penn State6214Wichita State563Penn State572Stanford827Iowa State4410Florida State5510Florida State44Ames Iowa Sat Mon2Stanford632Stanford8115South Dakota62 Final Four Nashville Tennessee edit National semifinalsApril 6National Championship GameApril 8 LI1UConn75S2Stanford56LI1UConn79ND1Notre Dame58ND1Notre Dame87LO4Maryland61 Final Four summaries edit ESPN April 6 20145 30 pm CDT Recap 4 Maryland Terrapins 61 1 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 87 Scoring by half 31 48 30 39Pts Brionna Jones 16Rebs Alyssa Thomas 6Asts Lexie Brown 8 Pts Kayla McBride 28Rebs Jewell Loyd Markisha Wright 9Asts Lindsay Allen 5 Bridgestone Arena Nashville TennesseeAttendance 17 548Referees Scott Yarbrough Cameron Inouye Mike Price ESPN April 6 20148 00 pm CDT Recap 2 Stanford Cardinal 56 1 Connecticut Huskies 75 Scoring by half 24 28 32 47Pts Amber Orrange 16Rebs Chiney Ogwumike 10Asts Amber Orrange 5 Pts Breanna Stewart 18Rebs Breanna Stewart Stefanie Dolson 7Asts Moriah Jefferson Bria Hartley 4 Bridgestone Arena Nashville TennesseeAttendance 17 548Referees Tina Napier Joe Vaszily Chuck Gonzales National championship edit ESPN April 8 20147 30 pm CDT Recap 1 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 58 1 Connecticut Huskies 79 Scoring by half 38 45 20 34Pts Kayla McBride 21Rebs Jewell Loyd 6Asts Lindsay Allen 5 Pts Breanna Stewart 21Rebs Stefanie Dolson 16Asts Stefanie Dolson Moriah Jefferson 7 Bridgestone Arena Nashville TennesseeAttendance 17 570Referees Dee Kantner Lisa Mattingly Denise Brooks nbsp Final Four in Nashville Undefeated Connecticut faced undefeated Notre Dame in the final game the first ever to feature two undefeated teams After a hard fought first half the Connecticut Huskies pulled away in the second for a 79 58 victory National Player of the Year Breanna Stewart scored 21 points for Connecticut Stefanie Dolson added 17 points and 16 rebounds for the victors Kayla McBride had 21 points for the Notre Dame Irish Connecticut won the rebound battle 54 31 and held Notre Dame to a season low in points After the game Notre Dame coach Muffet McGraw said I thought we were playing the Miami Heat for a while Connecticut is just that good 6 By winning Connecticut moved to 40 0 on the season and claimed their ninth title surpassing Tennessee s eight titles for the most all time Coach Geno Auriemma said he was flattered and grateful and all the things that come with this kind of accomplishment I m more proud of the legacy that exists and what Connecticut basketball is as opposed to the number of championships 6 All nine of the school s titles five with unbeaten records have come during Auriemma s twenty seasons as head coach Connecticut became the second school to finish the year 40 0 the other being Baylor They have now won 46 consecutive games the third most in NCAA history but well short of their NCAA record of 90 6 For Notre Dame it was their third loss in the title game in the last four years They were inhibited by the loss of senior starter Natalie Achonwa to injury in the Regional Final The Irish had won seven of the previous nine meeting between the two powerhouses However Connecticut beat them during the tournament for the second consecutive year having eliminated them in the Final Four in 2013 6 All Tournament team editBreanna Stewart Connecticut Kaleena Mosqueda Lewis Connecticut Stefanie Dolson Connecticut Kayla McBride Notre Dame Jewell Loyd Notre Dame 11 Game Officials editChuck Gonzalez semifinal Cameron Inouye semifinal Tina Napier semifinal Mike Price semifinal Joe Vaszily semifinal Scott Yarbrough semifinal Denise Brooks final Dee Kanter final Joe Vasily Standby Lisa Mattingly final 11 Record by conference editSource 14 Conference Bids Record Win R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NC American 2 9 1 0 900 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 ACC 8 15 8 0 652 8 6 3 3 2 1 Big East 2 3 2 0 600 2 2 1 SEC 8 12 8 0 600 8 6 5 1 Pac 12 5 7 5 0 583 5 4 1 1 1 Big Ten 5 6 5 0 545 5 5 1 Big 12 6 7 6 0 538 6 4 2 1 West Coast 2 2 2 0 500 2 1 1 Colonial 1 1 1 0 500 1 1 Atlantic 10 3 1 3 0 250 3 1 The R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG and NC columns indicate how many teams from each conference were in the round of 64 first round round of 32 second round Sweet 16 Elite Eight Final Four championship game and national champion respectively The America East Atlantic Sun Big Sky Big South Big West Conference USA Horizon Ivy MEAC Metro Atlantic Mid American MAC Missouri Valley Mountain West Northeast Ohio Valley Patriot Southern Southland Sun Belt SWAC and WAC conferences each had one representative that was eliminated in the first round Media coverage editTelevision edit ESPN had US television rights to all games during the tournament 15 For the first and second round ESPN aired select games nationally on ESPN ESPNU or ESPNews All other games aired regionally on ESPN or ESPN2 and streamed online via ESPN3 Most of the nation got whip a round coverage during this time which allowed ESPN to rotate between the games and focus the nation on the one that has the closest score The regional semifinals were split between ESPN and ESPN2 and ESPN aired the regional finals national semifinals and championship match 16 Studio host amp analysts edit Kevin Negandhi Host Kara Lawson Analyst Rebecca Lobo Analyst Broadcast assignments edit First amp Second Rounds Saturday Monday Mark Jones and LaChina Robinson Durham North Carolina Marc Kestecher and Brooke Weisbrod Lexington Kentucky Beth Mowins and Stephanie White Toledo Ohio Melissa Lee and Jimmy Dykes West Lafayette Indiana Clay Matvick and Fran Fraschilla Ames Iowa Joe Davis and Maria Taylor Knoxville Tennessee Dave Pasch and Doris Burke Los Angeles California Pam Ward and Carolyn Peck Waco Texas Sweet Sixteen amp Elite Eight Saturday Monday Beth Mowins Stephanie White and Maria Taylor South Bend Indiana Pam Ward Carolyn Peck and LaChina Robinson Lincoln Nebraska Final Four Dave O Brien Doris Burke and Holly Rowe Nashville Tennessee First amp Second Rounds Sunday Tuesday Cara Capuano and Nell Fortner Baton Rouge Louisiana Tom Hart and Mary Murphy Chapel Hill North Carolina Bob Wischusen and Christy Winters Scott College Park Maryland Bob Picozzi and Krista Blunk University Park Pennsylvania Carter Blackburn and Rosalyn Gold Onwude College Station Texas Holly Rowe and Brenda VanLengen Iowa City Iowa Dave Flemming and Sean Farnham Seattle Washington Dave O Brien and Debbie Antonelli Storrs Connecticut Sweet Sixteen amp Elite Eight Sunday Tuesday Dave O Brien Doris Burke and Holly Rowe Louisville Kentucky Dave Pasch Debbie Antonelli and Brooke Weisbrod Stanford California Championship Dave O Brien Doris Burke and Holly Rowe Nashville Tennessee Radio edit Westwood One had nationwide broadcast and streaming radio rights from the regional finals on through the championship 17 The teams participating in the Regional Finals Final Four and championship were allowed to have their own local broadcasts but were not allowed to stream their broadcast online Regional Finals Monday 18 Jason Benetti and Krista Blunk South Bend Indiana Craig Way and Brenda VanLengen Lincoln Nebraska Final Four 19 Dave Ryan Debbie Antonelli and Krista Blunk Nashville Tennessee Regional Finals Tuesday 18 Dave Ryan and Ann Schatz Louisville Kentucky Brandon Gaudin and Ann Meyers Drysdale Stanford California Championship 19 Dave Ryan Debbie Antonelli and Krista Blunk Nashville TennesseeSee also edit2014 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 2014 National Invitation Tournament 2014 Women s National Invitation TournamentNotes edit 2014 NCAA Division I Women s Basketball Final Four Ohio Valley Conference Retrieved November 21 2009 Nashville Ohio Valley Conference to host 2014 NCAA Women s Basketball Final Four Tennessee Tech Athletics November 16 2008 Retrieved November 21 2009 Nashville Will Host 2014 Women s Final Four NewsChannel 5 com Archived from the original on February 24 2012 Retrieved November 21 2009 NASHVILLE LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE NLOC ANNOUNCES IT HAS REACHED HALF WAY MARK OF FUNDRAISING GOAL Nashville Sports Council Retrieved April 11 2012 a b 2011 Basketball Championship Archived from the original on March 17 2011 Retrieved March 12 2011 a b c d e Doug Feinberg April 8 2014 UConn Women s Basketball Team Routs Notre Dame To Finish 40 0 Season Win Historic 9th Title Huffington Post Retrieved April 11 2014 Tickets amp Hospitality NCAA Archived from the original on October 7 2014 Retrieved March 13 2014 Four to Host N C A A Women s Regionals New York Times October 9 2013 Retrieved October 15 2013 Host sites selected for preliminary rounds of the 2014 championship NCAA October 9 2013 Retrieved October 15 2013 Nashville to host 2014 Women s Final Four WKRN com Retrieved November 21 2009 a b c Nixon Rick 2016 Women s Final Four Record Book PDF NCAA Retrieved May 1 2016 NCAA Record books NCAA DePaul beats Oklahoma in highest scoring regulation tourney game ESPN March 22 2014 Retrieved March 23 2014 The Tournament Field PDF NCAA Record books Archived PDF from the original on March 29 2022 Margolis Rachel December 15 2011 ESPN and NCAA Extend Rights Agreement through 2023 24 ESPN Retrieved December 15 2011 Margolis Rachel March 18 2014 ESPN Networks to Present Entire NCAA Division I Women s Basketball Championship ESPN Retrieved March 18 2014 NCAA Westwood One extend deal NCAA January 13 2011 Archived from the original on May 16 2013 Retrieved May 12 2013 a b 2014 NCAA Women s Division 1 Tournament Week 2 TV amp National Radio schedule Eye on Sky and Air Sports March 26 2014 Retrieved March 26 2014 a b 2014 NCAA Women s Division 1 Tournament Final Four Championship TV amp National Radio schedule Eye on Sky and Air Sports April 1 2014 Retrieved April 1 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2014 NCAA Division I women 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1217989017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.