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Boston College Eagles women's basketball

Boston College Eagles Women's Basketball is the NCAA Division I women's basketball program that represents Boston College in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. The team has competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) since 2005, having previously played in the Big East. The Eagles have appeared in 7 NCAA Tournaments in their history, most recently in 2006. They play home games at the Conte Forum, and are currently coached by Joanna Bernabei-McNamee, entering her fourth year.[2]

Boston College Eagles
UniversityBoston College
Head coachJoanna Bernabei-McNamee (5th season)
ConferenceAtlantic Coast Conference
LocationChestnut Hill, Massachusetts
ArenaConte Forum
(Capacity: 8,606)
NicknameEagles
ColorsMaroon and gold[1]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen
2003, 2004, 2006
NCAA Tournament Appearances
1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006
Conference Tournament Champions
2004 (Big East)

History

The Boston College women's basketball team played its first game January 9, 1973, and lost to Eastern Nazarene 42–35. In its next game BC downed Jackson, 52–30, to win its first game in the program's history. The Eagles finished their first season 4–6 with wins over Mount Ida, Stonehill College and Radcliffe. In her second season as head coach, Maureen Enos lead BC to a 9–4 record for the team's first-ever winning record.

Margo Plotzke took over in time for the 1980 season and she would finish her 14-season career on The Heights with only five losing seasons and a 177 wins.

In 1982 the women's team joined the Big East, finishing the season with a then-BC record 17 wins, but going only 3–7 in the conference. In the Big East tourney Boston College beat UConn 69–57, but bowed out after a loss to Providence, 56–38. In 1984–85 BC went 19–9 – its best season to that date – but found itself on the short end of a loss to Vilanova in the league tournament, ending its season.

Cathy Inglese arrives

In 1993 Cathy Inglese was named head coach of the basketball team and, after several years of rebuilding, turned the team into a perennial NCAA tournament team. Since the 1998–99 season, BC has been invited to the NCAA tournament six times, won the 2004 Big East title and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen twice—in 2003 and 2004.

In the 1998–99 season Inglese lead the Eagles to its first ever NCAA tournament appearance, a 22–8 overall record and the Eagles went 12–6 in the Big East. In its first-ever NCAA tourney game, BC beat Ohio State and then ran into Pat Summitt and Tennessee and lost in the second round.

The next season was even better for the Eagles as they won 26 total games, but again found themselves eliminated in the second round of the NCAA tournament when Virginia edged them out, 74–70. A season plagued by injuries marred the 2000-01 team which finished at 14-15 and on the outside looking into The Dance. In 2001–02, BC—who finished the season ranked 21st—received another invitation to the NCAA tournament but were ousted in the first round this time when Mississippi State took care of the women's team 65–59.

Sweet Sixteen years

Coach Inglese lead Boston College to back-to-back appearances in the Sweet Sixteen in the 2002–03 and 2003–04 seasons. BC finished the 2003 season ranked No. 25 and entered the NCAA tourney with a 20–9 record and, as a No. 5 seed, squeaked by Old Dominion 73–72 in the first round, then won another thriller on an Amber Jacobs jumper, which blounced around the rim, and fell in with 2.5 seconds remaining — giving the Eagles an 86–85 overtime win over Vanderbilt. Boston College was then steamrolled by No. 1 UConn as Diana Taurasi and Co. bounced BC 70–49.

In 2004 the women's team exacted some postseason revenge when BC upset the University of Connecticut in the Big East Tournament, 73–70, in the semi-finals. Boston College, who defeated Syracuse and Miami en route to its March 8 win over the Huskies, downed Rutgers in the finals to capture the Big East Tournament title—becoming the first Big East team to win four games to take the tournament crown. For its tournament title, BC finished the year ranked No. 18 and headed into the NCAA's as a No. 3 seed. The Eagles downed Eastern Michigan 58–56 in the first round; BC had an easier time in the second round, routing Ohio State 63–48 to move onto its second Sweet Sixteen in as many years. The No. 7-seeded University of Minnesota scored a mild upset over the Eagles with a 76–63 win and eliminated BC from the tournament.

2004–05 season

In its final year in the Big East the Boston College women's team finished the year at 20–10 with another trip to the NCAA's. In the regular season, BC finished a respectable 10–6 in conference play, but got bounced in its only game in the league tourney, losing 41–37 to Villanova. Then BC beat the University of Houston 65–43 in the first round of the NCAA tournament, but with a tough draw, were edged out by Duke 70–65.

2005–06 season

Boston College entered the 2005–06 season as a participant of the Preseason NIT. Following a 51–44 win over Drexel and a 62–51 victory over Richmond, BC ran into and were stuffed by former Big East rival UConn 60–46 in the semifinal round. The women rebounded with 41-point win over Vermont, topping the Catamounts 79–38. Boston College entered league play with a 12–2 record and ranked no. 19 in the country, including a stunning win against then top-10 ranked Stanford University. In BC's first-ever ACC game, the women lost in overtime to Maryland 67–64. After a rough 0–4 start to ACC play, the Eagles bounced back to win seven straight games, including wins in six consecutive conference games. BC won its first-ever ACC game as a league member on January 26 when it downed Virginia 57–43. The Eagles then won at NC State on January 30, 75–66.

The winning streak came to an end when BC was confronted with two straight games against top-5 opponents. On February 16, No. 4 Maryland downed the Eagles 86–59; then the BC women fell again, losing to the No. 2 team in the country when North Carolina dropped Boston College on Tobacco Road, 69–62. The regular season ended on a sour note for Boston College as NC State and Florida State handed BC two more losses on February 24 and February 26 respectively, closing the regular season with four straight losses for the Eagles. The Boston College women stand at 19–11 overall (6–8 ACC) and are No. 25 in the coaches' poll as of March 7. BC senior forward Brooke Queenan was named All-ACC Second Team. Queenan led the Eagles with 14.8 points and 8.0 rebounds-per-game for BC in the regular season.

Boston College lost its first-round game in its first-ever ACC tournament as the No. 8 seed, falling to Virginia 57–54 on March 2. BC earned an at-large bid in the NCAA field. The Eagles received a No. 8 seed beat Notre Dame 78-61 following 17 days off between games. BC advanced to the field of 32 to face No. 1 seeded Ohio State, a team which had won twenty straight games coming in. The underdog Eagles beat the Buckeyes 79–69 largely behind the performance of BC guard Kindyll Dorsey, who scored a school NCAA tournament record six 3-pointers and 24 points overall. BC then lost to the No. 5 seeded Utah Utes in the Sweet Sixteen 57–54, missing three potential game-tying shots in the last 20 seconds.

After the season, forward Brooke Queenan was drafted by the New York Liberty of the WNBA in the second round,[3] making her the third WNBA draft pick in BC history after Amber Jacobs and Cal Bouchard. Despite losing Queenan, All-ACC defensive teamer Aja Parham, and steady forward Lisa Macchia, BC headed into the offseason with a strong core of returning players including returning captain and point guard Sarah Marshall, senior guard Kindyll Dorsey, and senior center Kathrin Ress, as well as star incoming freshman, American Idol semifinalist, recording artist and McDonald's All-American Ayla Brown.[4]

2009–10 season

The Boston College Lady Eagles were off to a slow start with losses to teams such as Harvard and Vermont. The Eagles rebounded with eight wins against top 50 ranked schools. There were wins against #8 Duke, #6 Florida State, Miami and North Carolina. 2010 All-ACC First Team 6'6" JR Center Carolyn Swords who is ranked #1 in NCAA Div I for FG percentage for the 2009–10 and 2008–09 seasons and #3 her freshman year shot over 66% from the field. Swords scored 24 points in the semi-final of the 2010 ACC tournament but the BC Lady Eagles fell short 63–57 to NC State.

Year by year results

Conference tournament winners noted with # Source [5]

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason Coaches' poll AP poll
Maureen Enos (Independent) (1972–1976)
1972-73 Maureen Enos 4–6
1973-74 Maureen Enos 9–4
1974-75 Maureen Enos 8–7 MAIAW Tournament
1975-76 Maureen Enos 11–8 EAIAW Invitational
Maureen Enos: 32–25
Mary Ellen Martin (Independent) (1976–1978)
1976-77 Mary Ellen Martin 7–12
1977-78 Mary Ellen Martin 5–11
Mary Ellen Martin: 12–23
Carol Swindler (Independent) (1978–1980)
1978-79 Carol Swindler 5–15
1979-80 Carol Swindler 11–12
Carol Swindler: 16–27
Margo Plotzke (Independent, Big East) (1980–1993)
1980-81 Margo Plotzke 12–11
1981-82 Margo Plotzke 10–15
Big East Conference (1979–2013)
1982-83 Margo Plotzke 17–9 2–6 8th
1983-84 Margo Plotzke 11–16 2–6 T-7th
1984-85 Margo Plotzke 19–9 11–5 3rd
1985-86 Margo Plotzke 16–13 9–7 5th
1986-87 Margo Plotzke 17–12 8–8 6th
1987-88 Margo Plotzke 17–11 10–6 T-3rd
1988-89 Margo Plotzke 15–13 9–7 T-4th
1989-90 Margo Plotzke 16–13 9–7 4th
1990-91 Margo Plotzke 12–16 6–10 6th
1991-92 Margo Plotzke 5–23 3–15 10th
1992-93 Margo Plotzke 10–17 4–14 T-9th
Margo Plotzke: 177–178 73–91
Cathy Inglese (Big East, ACC) (1993–2008)
1993-94 Cathy Inglese 13–14 9–9 5th
1994-95 Cathy Inglese 6–21 3–15 10th
1995-96 Cathy Inglese 10–17 7–11 T-4th (BE 6)
1996-97 Cathy Inglese 18–10 13–5 3rd (BE 6)
1997-98 Cathy Inglese 17–11 11–7 4th (BE 6)
1998-99 Cathy Inglese 22–8 12–6 4th NCAA second round
1999-2000 Cathy Inglese 26–9 12–4 T-3rd NCAA second round 17 17
2000-01 Cathy Inglese 14–15 7–9 7th
2001-02 Cathy Inglese 23–8 12–4 T-3rd NCAA first round 21
2002-03 Cathy Inglese 22–9 12–4 T-3rd NCAA Sixteen 17 25
2003-04 Cathy Inglese 27–7 11–5 T-4th NCAA first round 14 18
2004-05 Cathy Inglese 20–10 10–6 T-4th NCAA second round 23 25
Atlantic Coast Conference
2005-06 Cathy Inglese 21–12 6–8 T-6th (ACC) NCAA Sixteen 19
2006-07 Cathy Inglese 13–16 3–11 10th
2007-08 Cathy Inglese 21–12 7–7 T-5th WNIT Sixteen
Cathy Inglese: 273–179 119–85
Sylvia Crawley (ACC) (2008–2012)
2008-09 Sylvia Crawley 23–12 7–7 7th WNIT Semifinals
2009-10 Sylvia Crawley 17–15 6–8 T-7th Declined WNIT
2010-11 Sylvia Crawley 20–12 5–9 T-7th WNIT Sixteen
2011-12 Sylvia Crawley 7–23 2–14 T-11th
Sylvia Crawley: 67–62 20–38
Erik Johnson (ACC) (2012–2018)
2012-13 Erik Johnson 12–19 5–13 T-9th
2013–14 Erik Johnson 12–19 3–13 T-14th
2014–15 Erik Johnson 13–17 5–11 12th
2015–16 Erik Johnson 15–16 2–14 14th
2016–17 Erik Johnson 9–21 2–14 15th
2017–18 Erik Johnson 7–23 2–14 T-13th
Erik Johnson: 68–115 19–79
Joanna Bernabei-McNamee (ACC) (2018–Present)
2018–19 Joanna Bernabei-McNamee 14–16 3–13 13th
2019–20 Joanna Bernabei-McNamee 20–12 11–7 T–4th
2020–21 Joanna Bernabei-McNamee 7–12 2–11 13th
2021–22 Joanna Bernabei-McNamee 21–12 10–8 T–7th WNIT Third round
2022–23 Joanna Bernabei-McNamee 16–17 5–13 T–11th
Joanna Bernabei-McNamee: 78–69 31–52
Total: 723–678

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Postseason Results

NCAA tournament results

The Eagles have appeared in the NCAA tournament 7 times. Their combined record is 9–7.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1999 #8 First round
Second Round
#9 Ohio State
#1 Tennessee
W 72-59
L 89-62
2000 #5 First round
Second Round
#12 Nebraska
#4 Virginia
W 93-76
L 74-70
2002 #5 First round #12 Mississippi State L 65-59
2003 #5 First round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#12 Old Dominion
#4 Vanderbilt
#1 Connecticut
W 73-72
W 86-85
L 70-49
2004 #3 First round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#14 Eastern Michigan
#6 Ohio State
#7 Minnesota
W 58-56
W 63-48
L 76-63
2005 #7 First round
Second Round
#10 Houston
#2 Duke
W 65-43
L 70-65
2006 #8 First round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#9 Notre Dame
#1 Ohio State
#5 Utah
W 78-61
W 79-69
L 57-54

WNIT Results

The Eagles have appeared in the Women's National Invitational Tournament (WNIT) 3 times. Their combined record is 8–4.

Year Round Opponent Result
2008 Round 2
Round 3
Vermont
St. John's
W 75–64
L 65–56
2009 Round 2
Round 3
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Boston University
St. John's
Georgetown
South Florida
W 68–53
W 68–64
W 65–56
L 65–82
2011 First round
Second Round
Regional semifinals
Yale
St. Joseph's
Virginia
W 85–61
W 86–59
L 48–53
2022 First round
Second Round
Third round
Maine
Quinnipiac
Columbia
W 69–44
W 94–68
L 51–54

References

  1. ^ "Boston College Athletics Style Guide" (PDF). May 1, 2021. Retrieved December 19, 2022.
  2. ^ "Joanna Bernabei-McNamee Named Eagles' Head Coach". BC Eagles. April 10, 2018. Retrieved April 12, 2018.
  3. ^ . www.cstv.com. Archived from the original on April 23, 2016. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  4. ^ "GOBIS: Seven to Hall". The Sun Chronicle. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  5. ^ . Boston College. Archived from the original on 2013-05-14. Retrieved 9 Aug 2013.

External links

  • Official website  

boston, college, eagles, women, basketball, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Boston College Eagles women s basketball news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Boston College Eagles Women s Basketball is the NCAA Division I women s basketball program that represents Boston College in Chestnut Hill Massachusetts The team has competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC since 2005 having previously played in the Big East The Eagles have appeared in 7 NCAA Tournaments in their history most recently in 2006 They play home games at the Conte Forum and are currently coached by Joanna Bernabei McNamee entering her fourth year 2 Boston College Eagles2022 23 Boston College Eagles women s basketball teamUniversityBoston CollegeHead coachJoanna Bernabei McNamee 5th season ConferenceAtlantic Coast ConferenceLocationChestnut Hill MassachusettsArenaConte Forum Capacity 8 606 NicknameEaglesColorsMaroon and gold 1 UniformsHome Away AlternateNCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen2003 2004 2006NCAA Tournament Appearances1999 2000 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006Conference Tournament Champions2004 Big East Contents 1 History 1 1 Cathy Inglese arrives 1 2 Sweet Sixteen years 1 3 2004 05 season 1 4 2005 06 season 1 5 2009 10 season 2 Year by year results 3 Postseason Results 3 1 NCAA tournament results 3 2 WNIT Results 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditThe Boston College women s basketball team played its first game January 9 1973 and lost to Eastern Nazarene 42 35 In its next game BC downed Jackson 52 30 to win its first game in the program s history The Eagles finished their first season 4 6 with wins over Mount Ida Stonehill College and Radcliffe In her second season as head coach Maureen Enos lead BC to a 9 4 record for the team s first ever winning record Margo Plotzke took over in time for the 1980 season and she would finish her 14 season career on The Heights with only five losing seasons and a 177 wins In 1982 the women s team joined the Big East finishing the season with a then BC record 17 wins but going only 3 7 in the conference In the Big East tourney Boston College beat UConn 69 57 but bowed out after a loss to Providence 56 38 In 1984 85 BC went 19 9 its best season to that date but found itself on the short end of a loss to Vilanova in the league tournament ending its season Cathy Inglese arrives Edit In 1993 Cathy Inglese was named head coach of the basketball team and after several years of rebuilding turned the team into a perennial NCAA tournament team Since the 1998 99 season BC has been invited to the NCAA tournament six times won the 2004 Big East title and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen twice in 2003 and 2004 In the 1998 99 season Inglese lead the Eagles to its first ever NCAA tournament appearance a 22 8 overall record and the Eagles went 12 6 in the Big East In its first ever NCAA tourney game BC beat Ohio State and then ran into Pat Summitt and Tennessee and lost in the second round The next season was even better for the Eagles as they won 26 total games but again found themselves eliminated in the second round of the NCAA tournament when Virginia edged them out 74 70 A season plagued by injuries marred the 2000 01 team which finished at 14 15 and on the outside looking into The Dance In 2001 02 BC who finished the season ranked 21st received another invitation to the NCAA tournament but were ousted in the first round this time when Mississippi State took care of the women s team 65 59 Sweet Sixteen years Edit Coach Inglese lead Boston College to back to back appearances in the Sweet Sixteen in the 2002 03 and 2003 04 seasons BC finished the 2003 season ranked No 25 and entered the NCAA tourney with a 20 9 record and as a No 5 seed squeaked by Old Dominion 73 72 in the first round then won another thriller on an Amber Jacobs jumper which blounced around the rim and fell in with 2 5 seconds remaining giving the Eagles an 86 85 overtime win over Vanderbilt Boston College was then steamrolled by No 1 UConn as Diana Taurasi and Co bounced BC 70 49 In 2004 the women s team exacted some postseason revenge when BC upset the University of Connecticut in the Big East Tournament 73 70 in the semi finals Boston College who defeated Syracuse and Miami en route to its March 8 win over the Huskies downed Rutgers in the finals to capture the Big East Tournament title becoming the first Big East team to win four games to take the tournament crown For its tournament title BC finished the year ranked No 18 and headed into the NCAA s as a No 3 seed The Eagles downed Eastern Michigan 58 56 in the first round BC had an easier time in the second round routing Ohio State 63 48 to move onto its second Sweet Sixteen in as many years The No 7 seeded University of Minnesota scored a mild upset over the Eagles with a 76 63 win and eliminated BC from the tournament 2004 05 season Edit In its final year in the Big East the Boston College women s team finished the year at 20 10 with another trip to the NCAA s In the regular season BC finished a respectable 10 6 in conference play but got bounced in its only game in the league tourney losing 41 37 to Villanova Then BC beat the University of Houston 65 43 in the first round of the NCAA tournament but with a tough draw were edged out by Duke 70 65 2005 06 season Edit Boston College entered the 2005 06 season as a participant of the Preseason NIT Following a 51 44 win over Drexel and a 62 51 victory over Richmond BC ran into and were stuffed by former Big East rival UConn 60 46 in the semifinal round The women rebounded with 41 point win over Vermont topping the Catamounts 79 38 Boston College entered league play with a 12 2 record and ranked no 19 in the country including a stunning win against then top 10 ranked Stanford University In BC s first ever ACC game the women lost in overtime to Maryland 67 64 After a rough 0 4 start to ACC play the Eagles bounced back to win seven straight games including wins in six consecutive conference games BC won its first ever ACC game as a league member on January 26 when it downed Virginia 57 43 The Eagles then won at NC State on January 30 75 66 The winning streak came to an end when BC was confronted with two straight games against top 5 opponents On February 16 No 4 Maryland downed the Eagles 86 59 then the BC women fell again losing to the No 2 team in the country when North Carolina dropped Boston College on Tobacco Road 69 62 The regular season ended on a sour note for Boston College as NC State and Florida State handed BC two more losses on February 24 and February 26 respectively closing the regular season with four straight losses for the Eagles The Boston College women stand at 19 11 overall 6 8 ACC and are No 25 in the coaches poll as of March 7 BC senior forward Brooke Queenan was named All ACC Second Team Queenan led the Eagles with 14 8 points and 8 0 rebounds per game for BC in the regular season Boston College lost its first round game in its first ever ACC tournament as the No 8 seed falling to Virginia 57 54 on March 2 BC earned an at large bid in the NCAA field The Eagles received a No 8 seed beat Notre Dame 78 61 following 17 days off between games BC advanced to the field of 32 to face No 1 seeded Ohio State a team which had won twenty straight games coming in The underdog Eagles beat the Buckeyes 79 69 largely behind the performance of BC guard Kindyll Dorsey who scored a school NCAA tournament record six 3 pointers and 24 points overall BC then lost to the No 5 seeded Utah Utes in the Sweet Sixteen 57 54 missing three potential game tying shots in the last 20 seconds After the season forward Brooke Queenan was drafted by the New York Liberty of the WNBA in the second round 3 making her the third WNBA draft pick in BC history after Amber Jacobs and Cal Bouchard Despite losing Queenan All ACC defensive teamer Aja Parham and steady forward Lisa Macchia BC headed into the offseason with a strong core of returning players including returning captain and point guard Sarah Marshall senior guard Kindyll Dorsey and senior center Kathrin Ress as well as star incoming freshman American Idol semifinalist recording artist and McDonald s All American Ayla Brown 4 2009 10 season Edit The Boston College Lady Eagles were off to a slow start with losses to teams such as Harvard and Vermont The Eagles rebounded with eight wins against top 50 ranked schools There were wins against 8 Duke 6 Florida State Miami and North Carolina 2010 All ACC First Team 6 6 JR Center Carolyn Swords who is ranked 1 in NCAA Div I for FG percentage for the 2009 10 and 2008 09 seasons and 3 her freshman year shot over 66 from the field Swords scored 24 points in the semi final of the 2010 ACC tournament but the BC Lady Eagles fell short 63 57 to NC State Year by year results EditConference tournament winners noted with Source 5 Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason Coaches poll AP pollMaureen Enos Independent 1972 1976 1972 73 Maureen Enos 4 6 1973 74 Maureen Enos 9 4 1974 75 Maureen Enos 8 7 MAIAW Tournament1975 76 Maureen Enos 11 8 EAIAW InvitationalMaureen Enos 32 25 Mary Ellen Martin Independent 1976 1978 1976 77 Mary Ellen Martin 7 12 1977 78 Mary Ellen Martin 5 11 Mary Ellen Martin 12 23 Carol Swindler Independent 1978 1980 1978 79 Carol Swindler 5 15 1979 80 Carol Swindler 11 12 Carol Swindler 16 27 Margo Plotzke Independent Big East 1980 1993 1980 81 Margo Plotzke 12 11 1981 82 Margo Plotzke 10 15 Big East Conference 1979 2013 1982 83 Margo Plotzke 17 9 2 6 8th1983 84 Margo Plotzke 11 16 2 6 T 7th1984 85 Margo Plotzke 19 9 11 5 3rd1985 86 Margo Plotzke 16 13 9 7 5th1986 87 Margo Plotzke 17 12 8 8 6th1987 88 Margo Plotzke 17 11 10 6 T 3rd1988 89 Margo Plotzke 15 13 9 7 T 4th1989 90 Margo Plotzke 16 13 9 7 4th1990 91 Margo Plotzke 12 16 6 10 6th1991 92 Margo Plotzke 5 23 3 15 10th1992 93 Margo Plotzke 10 17 4 14 T 9thMargo Plotzke 177 178 73 91Cathy Inglese Big East ACC 1993 2008 1993 94 Cathy Inglese 13 14 9 9 5th1994 95 Cathy Inglese 6 21 3 15 10th1995 96 Cathy Inglese 10 17 7 11 T 4th BE 6 1996 97 Cathy Inglese 18 10 13 5 3rd BE 6 1997 98 Cathy Inglese 17 11 11 7 4th BE 6 1998 99 Cathy Inglese 22 8 12 6 4th NCAA second round1999 2000 Cathy Inglese 26 9 12 4 T 3rd NCAA second round 17 172000 01 Cathy Inglese 14 15 7 9 7th2001 02 Cathy Inglese 23 8 12 4 T 3rd NCAA first round 212002 03 Cathy Inglese 22 9 12 4 T 3rd NCAA Sixteen 17 252003 04 Cathy Inglese 27 7 11 5 T 4th NCAA first round 14 182004 05 Cathy Inglese 20 10 10 6 T 4th NCAA second round 23 25Atlantic Coast Conference2005 06 Cathy Inglese 21 12 6 8 T 6th ACC NCAA Sixteen 192006 07 Cathy Inglese 13 16 3 11 10th2007 08 Cathy Inglese 21 12 7 7 T 5th WNIT SixteenCathy Inglese 273 179 119 85Sylvia Crawley ACC 2008 2012 2008 09 Sylvia Crawley 23 12 7 7 7th WNIT Semifinals2009 10 Sylvia Crawley 17 15 6 8 T 7th Declined WNIT2010 11 Sylvia Crawley 20 12 5 9 T 7th WNIT Sixteen2011 12 Sylvia Crawley 7 23 2 14 T 11thSylvia Crawley 67 62 20 38Erik Johnson ACC 2012 2018 2012 13 Erik Johnson 12 19 5 13 T 9th2013 14 Erik Johnson 12 19 3 13 T 14th2014 15 Erik Johnson 13 17 5 11 12th2015 16 Erik Johnson 15 16 2 14 14th2016 17 Erik Johnson 9 21 2 14 15th2017 18 Erik Johnson 7 23 2 14 T 13thErik Johnson 68 115 19 79Joanna Bernabei McNamee ACC 2018 Present 2018 19 Joanna Bernabei McNamee 14 16 3 13 13th2019 20 Joanna Bernabei McNamee 20 12 11 7 T 4th2020 21 Joanna Bernabei McNamee 7 12 2 11 13th2021 22 Joanna Bernabei McNamee 21 12 10 8 T 7th WNIT Third round2022 23 Joanna Bernabei McNamee 16 17 5 13 T 11thJoanna Bernabei McNamee 78 69 31 52Total 723 678 National champion Postseason invitational champion Conference regular season champion Conference regular season and conference tournament champion Division regular season champion Division regular season and conference tournament champion Conference tournament championPostseason Results EditNCAA tournament results Edit The Eagles have appeared in the NCAA tournament 7 times Their combined record is 9 7 Year Seed Round Opponent Result1999 8 First roundSecond Round 9 Ohio State 1 Tennessee W 72 59L 89 622000 5 First roundSecond Round 12 Nebraska 4 Virginia W 93 76L 74 702002 5 First round 12 Mississippi State L 65 592003 5 First roundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 12 Old Dominion 4 Vanderbilt 1 Connecticut W 73 72W 86 85L 70 492004 3 First roundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 14 Eastern Michigan 6 Ohio State 7 Minnesota W 58 56W 63 48L 76 632005 7 First roundSecond Round 10 Houston 2 Duke W 65 43L 70 652006 8 First roundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen 9 Notre Dame 1 Ohio State 5 Utah W 78 61W 79 69L 57 54WNIT Results Edit The Eagles have appeared in the Women s National Invitational Tournament WNIT 3 times Their combined record is 8 4 Year Round Opponent Result2008 Round 2Round 3 VermontSt John s W 75 64L 65 562009 Round 2Round 3QuarterfinalsSemifinals Boston UniversitySt John sGeorgetownSouth Florida W 68 53W 68 64W 65 56L 65 822011 First roundSecond RoundRegional semifinals YaleSt Joseph sVirginia W 85 61W 86 59L 48 532022 First roundSecond RoundThird round MaineQuinnipiacColumbia W 69 44W 94 68L 51 54References Edit Boston College Athletics Style Guide PDF May 1 2021 Retrieved December 19 2022 Joanna Bernabei McNamee Named Eagles Head Coach BC Eagles April 10 2018 Retrieved April 12 2018 Brooke Queenan Selected in the second round of the WNBA Draft Queenan selected as the 23rd pick by the New York Liberty www cstv com Archived from the original on April 23 2016 Retrieved 2016 04 13 GOBIS Seven to Hall The Sun Chronicle Retrieved 2016 04 13 Boston College Eagles Women s Basketball Media Guide Boston College Archived from the original on 2013 05 14 Retrieved 9 Aug 2013 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boston College Eagles women 27s basketball amp 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