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2004 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament





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The 2004 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament began on March 20 and concluded on April 6 when Connecticut won a third consecutive national championship, becoming only the second school in history to accomplish such a feat. The Final Four was held at the New Orleans ArenainNew Orleans, Louisiana, on April 4–6 and was hosted by Tulane University. UConn, coached by Geno Auriemma, defeated archrivals Tennessee, coached by Pat Summitt, 81–67 in the championship game. UConn's Diana Taurasi was named Most Outstanding Player for the second consecutive year. The tournament was also notable as UC Santa Barbara became the first double digit seed not to lose by a double-digit margin in the Sweet 16 as they lost to UConn 63–57.

2004 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
2004 Women's Final Four logo
Teams64
Finals siteNew Orleans Arena
New Orleans
ChampionsConnecticut Huskies (5th title, 5th title game,
8th Final Four)
Runner-upTennessee Volunteers (11th title game,
15th Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • LSU Tigers (1st Final Four)
  • Winning coachGeno Auriemma (5th title)
    MOPDiana Taurasi (Connecticut)
    NCAA Division I women's tournaments
    «2003 2005»

    Tournament records

    edit

    Qualifying teams – automatic

    edit

    Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2004 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA tournament.[2]

    Automatic bids
        Record  
    Qualifying school Conference Regular
    season
    Conference Seed
    Austin Peay State University Ohio Valley Conference 23–7 14–2 13
    Boston College Big East 25–6 11–5 3
    University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Southern Conference 28–2 20–0 10
    Colgate University Patriot League 21–9 10–4 16
    Duke University ACC 27–3 15–1 1
    Eastern Michigan University MAC 22–7 12–4 14
    University of Wisconsin–Green Bay Horizon League 23–7 13–3 14
    Hampton University MEAC 17–10 14–4 16
    University of Houston Conference USA 27–3 13–1 3
    Liberty University Big South Conference 25–6 14–0 14
    Lipscomb University Atlantic Sun Conference 20–11 14–6 15
    Louisiana Tech University WAC 27–2 17–1 5
    Loyola Marymount University West Coast Conference 24–5 13–1 13
    University of Maine America East 25–6 17–1 13
    Marist College MAAC 20–10 13–5 14
    Middle Tennessee State University Sun Belt Conference 23–7 10–4 13
    Missouri State University Missouri Valley Conference 28–3 16–2 12
    University of Montana Big Sky Conference 27–4 14–0 12
    University of New Mexico Mountain West 23–7 12–2 12
    Northwestern State University Southland 24–6 14–2 16
    University of Oklahoma Big 12 23–8 9–7 3
    Old Dominion University Colonial 25–6 17–1 8
    University of Pennsylvania Ivy League 17–10 11–3 15
    Purdue University Big Ten 27–3 14–2 2
    Southern University SWAC 17–12 12–6 16
    St. Francis (PA) Northeast Conference 25–5 18–0 15
    Stanford University Pac-10 24–6 14–4 6
    Temple University Atlantic 10 21–9 14–2 11
    University of California, Santa Barbara Big West Conference 25–6 17–1 11
    Valparaiso University Mid-Continent 20–11 11–5 15
    Vanderbilt University SEC 24–7 8–6 2

    Qualifying teams – at-large

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    Thirty-three additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.[2]

    At-large bids
        Record  
    Qualifying school Conference Regular
    season
    Conference Seed
    University of Arizona Pacific-10 24–8 14–4 9
    Auburn University Southeastern 21–8 9–5 7
    Baylor University Big 12 24–8 10–6 4
    University of Colorado at Boulder Big 12 22–7 11–5 6
    University of Connecticut Big East 25–4 14–2 2
    DePaul University Conference USA 22–6 10–4 9
    University of Florida Southeastern 18–10 8–6 5
    The George Washington University Atlantic 10 22–7 14–2 8
    University of Georgia Southeastern 22–9 8–6 3
    University of Iowa Big Ten 16–12 10–6 9
    Kansas State University Big 12 24–5 14–2 2
    Louisiana State University Southeastern 23–7 10–4 4
    Marquette University Conference USA 21–9 9–5 9
    University of Maryland Atlantic Coast 17–12 8–8 12
    University of Miami Big East 22–6 11–5 5
    Michigan State University Big Ten 21–8 10–6 8
    University of Minnesota Big Ten 21–8 9–7 7
    University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) Southeastern 17–13 7–7 10
    University of Missouri Big 12 17–12 7–9 11
    University of North Carolina Atlantic Coast 24–6 12–4 4
    North Carolina State University Atlantic Coast 17–14 8–8 10
    University of Notre Dame Big East 19–10 12–4 5
    Ohio State University Big Ten 20–9 11–5 6
    Pennsylvania State University Big Ten 25–5 15–1 1
    Rutgers University Big East 21–11 10–6 7
    Texas Christian University Conference USA 24–6 11–3 6
    University of Tennessee Southeastern 26–3 14–0 1
    University of Texas at Austin Big 12 28–4 14–2 1
    Texas Tech University Big 12 24–7 10–6 4
    University of California, Los Angeles Pacific-10 17–12 11–7 10
    Villanova University Big East 22–6 12–4 7
    Virginia Tech Big East 22–7 10–6 8
    West Virginia University Big East 21–10 10–6 11

    Bids by conference

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    Thirty-one conferences earned an automatic bid. In twenty-three cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-three additional at-large teams were selected from eight of the conferences.[2]

    Bids Conference Teams
    8 Big East Boston College, Connecticut, Miami FL, Notre Dame, Rutgers, Villanova, Virginia Tech, West Virginia
    7 Big 12 Oklahoma, Baylor, Colorado, Kansas St., Missouri, Texas, Texas Tech
    7 Southeastern Vanderbilt, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, LSU, Ole Miss, Tennessee
    6 Big Ten Purdue, Iowa, Michigan St., Minnesota, Ohio St., Penn St.
    4 Atlantic Coast Duke, Maryland., North Carolina, North Carolina St.
    4 Conference USA Houston, DePaul, Marquette, TCU
    3 Pacific-10 Stanford, Arizona, UCLA
    2 Atlantic 10 Temple, George Washington
    1 America East Maine
    1 Atlantic Sun Lipscomb
    1 Big Sky Montana
    1 Big South Liberty
    1 Big West UC Santa Barb.
    1 Colonial Old Dominion
    1 Horizon Green Bay
    1 Ivy Penn
    1 Metro Atlantic Marist
    1 Mid-American Eastern Mich.
    1 Mid-Continent Valparaiso
    1 Mid-Eastern Hampton
    1 Missouri Valley Missouri St.
    1 Mountain West New Mexico
    1 Northeast St. Francis Pa.
    1 Ohio Valley Austin Peay
    1 Patriot Colgate
    1 Southern Chattanooga
    1 Southland Northwestern St.
    1 Southwestern Southern U.
    1 Sun Belt Middle Tenn.
    1 West Coast Loyola Marymount
    1 Western Athletic Louisiana Tech

    First and second rounds

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    Notre Dame

     

    Santa Barbara

     

    Blacksburg

     

    Bridgeport

     

    Missoula

     

    Columbus

     

    Durham

     

    Minneapolis

     

    Albuquerque

     

    Tempe

     

    Chattanooga

     

    Tallahassee

     

    Austin

     

    Baton Rouge

     

    Ames

     

    Philadelphia

    2004 NCAA NCAA first and second round venues

    In 2004, 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. Sixteen sites for the first two rounds were determined approximately a year before the team selections and seedings were completed, following a practice established in 2003.[3]

    The following table lists the region, host school, venue and the sixteen first and second round locations:[4]

    Region Rnd Host Venue City State
    East 1&2 University of Notre Dame Edmund P. Joyce Center Notre Dame Indiana
    East 1&2 University of California, Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara Events Center Santa Barbara California
    East 1&2 Virginia Tech Cassell Coliseum Blacksburg Virginia
    East 1&2 Fairfield University Bridgeport Arena at Harbor Yard Bridgeport Connecticut
    Mideast 1&2 University of Montana Dahlberg Arena Missoula Montana
    Mideast 1&2 Ohio State University St. John Arena Columbus Ohio
    Mideast 1&2 Duke University Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North Carolina
    Mideast 1&2 University of Minnesota Williams Arena Minneapolis Minnesota
    Midwest 1&2 University of New Mexico The Pit (arena) Albuquerque New Mexico
    Midwest 1&2 Arizona State University Wells Fargo Arena Tempe Arizona
    Midwest 1&2 University of Tennessee at Chattanooga McKenzie Arena Chattanooga Tennessee
    Midwest 1&2 Florida State University Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center Tallahassee Florida
    West 1&2 University of Texas Frank Erwin Center Austin Texas
    West 1&2 Louisiana State University LSU Assembly Center (Pete Maravich Assembly Center) Baton Rouge Louisiana
    West 1&2 Iowa State University Hilton Coliseum Ames Iowa
    West 1&2 Temple University Liacouras Center Philadelphia Pennsylvania

    Regionals and Final Four

    edit
     
     

    Norman

     

    Seattle

     

    Hartford

     

    Norfolk

     

    New Orleans

    2004 NCAA regionals and Final Four

    The Regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 27 to March 30 at these sites:[4]

    Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held April 4 and April 6 in New Orleans at the New Orleans Arena (Host: Tulane University)

    Bids by state

    edit

    The sixty-four teams came from thirty-two states, plus Washington, D.C. Tennessee had the most teams with six bids. Eighteen states did not have any teams receiving bids.[2]

     
    NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2004
    Bids State Teams
    6 Tennessee Austin Peay, Chattanooga, Lipscomb, Middle Tenn., Vanderbilt, Tennessee
    5 Texas Houston, Baylor, TCU, Texas, Texas Tech
    4 California Loyola Marymount, Stanford, UC Santa Barb., UCLA
    4 Louisiana Louisiana Tech, Northwestern St., Southern U., LSU
    4 Pennsylvania Penn, Temple, Penn St., Villanova St. Francis Pa.
    4 Virginia Hampton, Liberty, Old Dominion, Virginia Tech
    3 Indiana Purdue, Valparaiso, Notre Dame
    3 New York Colgate, Marist,
    3 North Carolina Duke, North Carolina, North Carolina St.
    2 Florida Florida, Miami FL
    2 Michigan Eastern Mich., Michigan St.
    2 Missouri Missouri St., Missouri
    2 Wisconsin Green Bay, Marquette
    1 Alabama Auburn
    1 Arizona Arizona
    1 Colorado Colorado
    1 Connecticut Connecticut
    1 District of Columbia George Washington
    1 Georgia Georgia
    1 Illinois DePaul
    1 Iowa Iowa
    1 Kansas Kansas St.
    1 Maine Maine
    1 Maryland Maryland.
    1 Massachusetts Boston College
    1 Minnesota Minnesota
    1 Mississippi Ole Miss
    1 Montana Montana
    1 New Jersey Rutgers
    1 New Mexico New Mexico
    1 Ohio Ohio St.
    1 Oklahoma Oklahoma
    1 West Virginia West Virginia

    Brackets

    edit

    Data Source[5]

    East Region – Hartford, Connecticut

    edit
    First round
    March 20 and 21
    Second round
    March 22 and 23
    Regional semifinals
    March 27
    Regional finals
    March 29
                
    1Penn State 79
    16Hampton 42
    1Penn State 61
    Blacksburg, Virginia
    8Virginia Tech 48
    8Virginia Tech 89
    9Iowa 76
    1Penn State 55
    5Notre Dame 49
    5Notre Dame 69*
    12Missouri State 65
    5Notre Dame 59
    South Bend, Indiana
    13Middle Tennessee 46
    4North Carolina 62
    13Middle Tennessee 67
    1Penn State 49
    2Connecticut 66
    6Colorado 49
    11UC Santa Barbara 76
    11UC Santa Barbara 56
    Santa Barbara, California
    3Houston 52
    3Houston 62
    14Green Bay 47
    11UC Santa Barbara 57
    2Connecticut 63
    7Auburn 79
    10NC State 59
    7Auburn 53
    Bridgeport, Connecticut
    2Connecticut 79
    2Connecticut 91
    15Pennsylvania 55

    Mideast Region – Norfolk, Virginia

    edit
    First round
    March 20 and 21
    Second round
    March 22 and 23
    Regional semifinals
    March 28
    Regional finals
    March 30
                
    1Duke 103
    16Northwestern State 51
    1Duke 76
    Durham, North Carolina
    9Marquette 67
    8Old Dominion 64
    9Marquette 67
    1Duke 63
    5Louisiana Tech 49
    5Louisiana Tech 81
    12Montana 77
    5Louisiana Tech 81
    Missoula, Montana
    4Texas Tech 64
    4Texas Tech 60
    13Maine 50
    1Duke 75
    7Minnesota 82
    6Ohio State 73
    11West Virginia 67
    6Ohio State 48
    Columbus, Ohio
    3Boston College 63
    3Boston College 58
    14Eastern Michigan 56
    3Boston College 63
    7Minnesota 76
    7Minnesota 92
    10UCLA 81
    7Minnesota 80
    Minneapolis, Minnesota
    2Kansas State 61
    2Kansas State 71
    15Valparaiso 63

    Midwest Region – Norman, Oklahoma

    edit
    First round
    March 20 and 21
    Second round
    March 22 and 23
    Regional semifinals
    March 28
    Regional finals
    March 30
                
    1Tennessee 77
    16Colgate 54
    1Tennessee 79
    Tallahassee, Florida
    9DePaul 59
    8George Washington 46
    9DePaul 83
    1Tennessee 71
    4Baylor 69
    5Florida 68
    12New Mexico 56
    5Florida 76
    Albuquerque, New Mexico
    4Baylor 91
    4Baylor 71
    13Loyola Marymount 60
    1Tennessee 62
    6Stanford 60
    6Stanford 68
    11Missouri 44
    6Stanford 68
    Tempe, Arizona
    3Oklahoma 43
    3Oklahoma 58
    14Marist 45
    6Stanford 57
    2Vanderbilt 55
    7Rutgers 69
    10Chattanooga 74
    10Chattanooga 44
    Chattanooga, Tennessee
    2Vanderbilt 60
    2Vanderbilt 76
    15Lipscomb 45

    West Region – Seattle

    edit
    First round
    March 20 and 21
    Second round
    March 22 and 23
    Regional semifinals
    March 27
    Regional finals
    March 29
                
    1Texas 92
    16Southern 57
    1Texas 80
    Austin, Texas
    8Michigan State 61
    8Michigan State 72
    9Arizona 60
    1Texas 55
    4LSU 71
    5Miami (FL) 85
    12Maryland 86
    12Maryland 61
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana
    4LSU 76
    4LSU 83
    13Austin Peay 66
    4LSU 62
    3Georgia 60
    6TCU 70
    11Temple 57
    6TCU 71
    Philadelphia
    3Georgia 85
    3Georgia 78
    14Liberty 53
    3Georgia 66
    2Purdue 64
    7Villanova 66
    10Ole Miss 63
    7Villanova 42
    Ames, Iowa
    2Purdue 60
    2Purdue 78
    15St. Francis (PA) 59

    Final Four – New Orleans

    edit
    National semifinals
    April 4
    National championship
    April 6
          
    E2 Connecticut 67
    ME7 Minnesota 58
    E2 Connecticut 70
    MW1 Tennessee 61
    MW1 Tennessee 52
    W4 LSU 50

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

    Record by conference

    edit
    Conference # of Bids Record Win % Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four Championship Game
    Big East 8 12-7 63.2% 3 1 1 1
    SEC 7 16-7 69.6% 4 3 2 1
    Big 12 7 7-7 50.0% 2 0 0 0
    Big Ten 6 11-6 64.7% 3 2 1 0
    ACC 4 4-4 50.0% 1 1 0 0
    Conference USA 4 4-4 50.0% 0 0 0 0
    Pac-10 3 3-3 50.0% 1 1 0 0
    Atlantic 10 2 0-2 0.0% 0 0 0 0
    Big West Conference 1 2-1 66.7% 1 0 0 0
    WAC 1 2-1 66.7% 1 0 0 0
    Southern Conference 1 1-1 50.0% 0 0 0 0
    Sun Belt Conference 1 1-1 50.0% 0 0 0 0

    Nineteen conferences went 0-1: America East, Atlantic Sun Conference, Big Sky Conference, Big South Conference Colonial, Horizon League, Ivy League, MAAC, MAC, Summit League, MEAC, Missouri Valley Conference, Mountain West, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southland, SWAC, and West Coast Conference

    All-Tournament team

    edit

    Game officials

    edit

    See also

    edit

    Notes

    edit
    1. ^ Nixon, Rick. "2023 Women's Final Four Championship Record Book" (PDF). NCAA. p. 85. Retrieved March 26, 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.
  • ^ HAVEL, CARRIE J. (2005). "The NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Championship: an analysis of first and second rounds and the change to predetermined sites" (PDF). p. 1. Retrieved April 20, 2012.
  • ^ a b "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=2004_NCAA_Division_I_women%27s_basketball_tournament&oldid=1233041464"
     



    Last edited on 6 July 2024, at 23:44  





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