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National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship) April 4 and 6 Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas (Hosts: the Incarnate Word, the UTSA, and San Antonio Sports) This is the second time the women's Final Four was played in San Antonio, having previously been played in the city in 2002.
The NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament, sometimes referred to as Women's March Madness, [1] is a single-elimination tournament played each spring in the United States, currently featuring 68 women's college basketball teams from the Division I level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), to determine the national championship.
Teams were seeded by 2009–10 SEC season record, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. Unlike men's basketball play, SEC women's play is not conducted in a divisional format; all 12 teams are organized in a single table. The top four teams in the regular-season standings received byes.
When and where will the Women’s National Championship game air? Whichever two teams emerge victorious Friday evening will meet Sunday, April 7 at 3:00 p.m. ET. The game will air on ABC.
The 6.9 million would have been the biggest telecast in women’s college basketball history at any stage prior to last season. Note too that 6.7 million Americans tuned into the game following ...
DePaul University’s women’s basketball team started out its season playing Iowa in front of a record-breaking crowd for the sport — 55,646 fans. DePaul head coach Doug Bruno recalls the bus ...
The team also won the Big 12 regular-season championship (with a 16–0 conference record) and the Big 12 Tournament. They became the first Big 12 women's basketball team to remain undefeated throughout conference play. In the 2008–09 season, the Sooners made it to the Final Four of the 2009 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament.
The program won the 2006 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament championship and has appeared in the NCAA Final Four five times (1982, 1989, 2006, 2014, 2015); Maryland also appeared once in the AIAW Final Four (1978). As members of the ACC, the Terrapins won regular season conference championships (1979, 1982, 1988, 1989, 2009) and an ...