1995 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 1995 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament featured 64 teams. The Final Four consisted of Connecticut, Tennessee, Stanford, and Georgia. Connecticut defeated Tennessee 70–64 to win its first NCAA title and complete a 35–0 undefeated season.

1995 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Teams64
Finals siteTarget Center
Minneapolis, Minnesota
ChampionsConnecticut Huskies (1st title, 1st title game,
2nd Final Four)
Runner-upTennessee Volunteers (5th title game,
8th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachGeno Auriemma (1st title)
MOPRebecca Lobo (Connecticut)
NCAA Division I women's tournaments
«19941996»

The first two rounds were held at the home court of the top four seeds in each region (except for San Diego State, which hosted three games in the West region). The regional semifinals and finals were held at the University of Connecticut for the East region, UCLA for the West region, the University of Tennessee for the Mideast region, and Drake University for the Midwest region. The Final Four was played in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[1]

Notable events

In a second-round game, 4 seed Alabama faced the 5 seed Duke. The game was close throughout the contest, with neither team leading the other by more than seven points. With time winding down in regulation, Alabama's Niesa Johnson hit a three-pointer to send the game to overtime. Not just one overtime, the game would eventually feature four overtimes. Johnson went on to hit two free throws at the end of the fourth overtime to give Alabama a 121–120 victory, setting records for the most overtimes, and the most points scored in an NCAA tournament game. At the time, it was called "the best women's basketball game in history".[2][3]

In the east regional semi-final involving Louisiana Tech and Virginia, confusion reigned momentarily with both teams celebrating at the end of regulation. Louisiana Tech led early, with as much as a 13-point lead in the first half and a ten-point lead at halftime. The Cavaliers came back and had a 63–62 lead with seconds left in the game. With time running out, Louisiana Tech's Debra Williams went to the foul line for a one-and-one shot. She missed it, but the scorekeeper accidentally recorded it, so the scoreboard showed 63–63. Louisiana Tech tried and missed a last second shot, but thought they were headed to overtime based upon the score, while Virginia thought they had won, so both teams were celebrating. The referees met at the scores table to sort it out, then Dee Kantner emerged and pointed to the Virginia bench signaling victory.[4]

Georgia and Tennessee, both from the SEC, squared off in one of the Final Four match ups. Tennessee was a number 1 seed, while Georgia was a 3 seed, and upset top seed Colorado 82–79 in the Midwest Rational final. The two teams had faced each other in the final game of the regular season, when the Lady Vols beat the Lady Bulldogs by 22 points. Georgia coach Andy Landers complained about lack of effort in that game, but did not have the same complaints in the Final Four game, even though the final margin was identical. Tennessee's Pat Summitt emphasizes rebounds, and Tennessee out rebounded Georgia 51–33. While the Lady Bulldogs were able to get within seven points in the second half, they could get no closer and Tennessee prevailed 73–51, to send them into the champions ship game.[5]

Despite entering the game against Stanford with an undefeated record, some skeptics weren't convinced that Connecticut could win. Although UConn had beaten Tennessee earlier in the year, they then played in the Big East, which at the time wasn't a strong conference. The Big East earned just two invitations to the NCAA tournament, while eight other conferences had three or more teams in the tournament. Stanford was a representative of the Pacific-10 conference, which had five teams strong enough to earn bids. However, the Huskies jumped out to an early 16–4 lead, and ended the game with a 27-point margin, winning 87–60. Kara Wolters scored 31 points, a single point under her career high while Jamelle Elliott matched her career high with 21 points. Consensus national player of the year Rebecca Lobo added 17 points, prompting coach Auriemma to quip "The reason we're playing [in the final] is I've got these three players [and Tara VanDerveer doesn't.]"[6]

In the championship game, Tennessee had a small lead in the first half 28–25, but more importantly, two of UConn's All-Americans, Jennifer Rizzotti and Rebecca Lobo, had three fouls, while six foot seven inch Kara Wolters had two. Auriemma tried playing small, with six foot Jamelle Elliott the tallest Husky on the floor. The Tennessee lead extended, but only to six points at the half. In the second half, the lead was still four points in the Lady Vols favor when Wolters received her fourth foul. With twelve minutes left to go in the game, Lobo had but six points. Lobo then scored on four possessions, and with a steal by Rizzotti turned into a layup, the Tennessee nine point lead was down to a single point, prompting coach Summitt to call for a time-out. Jamelle Elliott tied the game with just over two minutes left, then Rizzotti made a play which would be talked about for years afterward. She grabbed a rebound, then drove the length of the court against Michelle M. Marciniak. Just before reaching the basket, she executed a cross-over dribble and sank a left-handed layup to take a lead that would never be relinquished. UConn won the game 70–64, completing the first undefeated season in NCAA history since the 1986 Texas team, and winning the first national championship for the Connecticut Huskies team.[7]

Tournament records

  • Free Throws – Connecticut made 34 free throws in the semi-final game against Stanford, setting the record for most free throws completed in a Final Four.
  • Most points – Alabama scored 121 points in a four overtime game against Duke, setting the record for most points scored in an NCAA tournament game. The 120 pins scored by Duke is the second most scored in an NCAA tournament game, and the most in a losing effort.
  • Field goals attempted – Alabama attempted 114 fields goals in the game against Duke, setting the record for most field goals attempted in an NCAA tournament game.
  • Most overtimes – Alabama and Duke played in a four overtime game, the most overtimes in an NCAA tournament game.[8]

Qualifying teams – automatic

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 1995 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-two conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 1995 NCAA Tournament .[8]

Automatic Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
University of Colorado at BoulderBig Eight27–214–01
University of ConnecticutBig East29–018–01
Dartmouth CollegeIvy League16–1012–214
Drake UniversityMissouri Valley Conference24–513–55
Florida International UniversityTrans America26–415–19
Florida A&MMEAC24–514–216
Furman UniversitySouthern Conference18–1110–415
The George Washington UniversityAtlantic 1024–514–24
College of the Holy CrossPatriot League21–812–216
Jackson State UniversitySWAC22–512–215
Loyola University MarylandMAAC20–87–610
University of MaineNorth Atlantic Conference24–514–216
Marquette UniversityGreat Midwest19–119–310
University of MontanaBig Sky Conference25–612–212
Mount St. Mary's UniversityNortheast Conference24–517–113
University of North CarolinaACC28–412–43
Northern Illinois UniversityMidwestern Collegiate17–1310–616
Old Dominion UniversityColonial27–513–18
Pennsylvania State UniversityBig Ten25–413–32
Radford UniversityBig South Conference16–1311–511
University of San FranciscoWest Coast Conference24–413–111
University of Southern MississippiMetro21–87–57
Stanford UniversityPac-1026–217–12
Stephen F. Austin State UniversitySouthland22–715–311
Tennessee State UniversityOhio Valley Conference22–612–412
Texas Tech UniversitySouthwest30–313–12
University of ToledoMAC24–615–313
University of California, IrvineBig West Conference19–1012–615
University of UtahWAC23–612–28
Vanderbilt UniversitySEC26–68–31
Western Illinois UniversityMid-Continent17–1114–414
Western Kentucky UniversitySun Belt Conference26–312–24

Qualifying teams – at-large

Thirty-two additional teams were selected to complete the six-four invitations.[8]

At-large Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
University of AlabamaSoutheastern20–87–44
University of ArkansasSoutheastern22–67–46
DePaul UniversityGreat Midwest20–89–313
Duke UniversityAtlantic Coast21–810–65
University of FloridaSoutheastern23–87–46
University of GeorgiaSoutheastern24–48–33
Indiana UniversityBig Ten19–98–814
University of KansasBig Eight20–108–67
Louisiana Tech UniversitySun Belt26–413–12
University of LouisvilleMetro24–77–511
University of MemphisGreat Midwest21–710–28
University of Mississippi (Ole Miss)Southeastern21–76–512
Missouri State UniversityMissouri Valley20–1114–49
North Carolina State UniversityAtlantic Coast19–911–57
Ohio UniversityMid-American23–615–314
University of OklahomaBig Eight21–811–37
Oklahoma State University–StillwaterBig Eight17–117–712
University of OregonPacific-1018–911–76
Oregon State UniversityPacific-1020–712–65
University of PortlandWest Coast23–612–213
Purdue UniversityBig Ten21–713–34
San Diego State UniversityWestern Athletic24–514–05
Seton Hall UniversityBig East23–812–66
Southern Methodist UniversitySouthwest20–99–510
University of Southern CaliforniaPacific-1018–910–89
Saint Joseph's UniversityAtlantic 1020–811–59
University of TennesseeSoutheastern29–211–01
Tulane UniversityMetro19–99–315
University of VirginiaAtlantic Coast24–416–03
Virginia TechMetro21–810–28
University of WashingtonPacific-1023–813–53
University of Wisconsin–MadisonBig Ten19–811–510

Bids by conference

Thirty-two conferences earned an automatic bid. In seventeen cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-two additional at-large teams were selected from fifteen of the conferences.[8]

BidsConferenceTeams
7SoutheasternVanderbilt, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Ole Miss, Tennessee
5Pacific-10Stanford, Oregon, Oregon St., Southern California, Washington
4Big EightColorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St.
4Big TenPenn St., Indiana, Purdue, Wisconsin
4MetroSouthern Miss., Louisville, Tulane, Virginia Tech
4Atlantic CoastNorth Carolina, Duke, North Carolina St., Virginia
3Great MidwestMarquette, DePaul, Memphis
3Sun BeltFIU, Western Ky., Louisiana Tech
2Atlantic 10George Washington, St. Joseph's
2Big EastConnecticut, Seton Hall
2Mid-AmericanToledo, Ohio
2Missouri ValleyDrake, Missouri St.
2SouthwestTexas Tech, SMU
2West CoastSan Francisco, Portland
2Western AthleticUtah, San Diego St.
1Big SkyMontana
1Big SouthRadford
1Big WestUC Irvine
1ColonialOld Dominion
1IvyDartmouth
1Metro AtlanticLoyola Md
1Mid-ContinentWestern Illinois.
1Mid-EasternFlorida A&M
1Midwestern CollegiateNorthern Illinois
1North AtlanticMaine
1NortheastMt. St. Mary's
1Ohio ValleyTennessee St.
1PatriotHoly Cross
1SouthernFurman
1SouthlandStephen F. Austin
1SouthwesternJackson St.

First and second rounds

Charlottesville
Storrs
Tuscaloosa
Ruston
Bowling Green
Seattle
Knoxville
Lubbock
Athens
University Park
Boulder
Washington
Chapel Hill
Nashville
Stanford
San Diego
1995 NCAA first and second round venues

In 1995, 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 most cases, the higher seed accepted the opportunity. The exception:[9]

  • Fourth seeded Purdue was eligible to host, but unable to, so fifth seeded San Diego State hosted three first and second-round games

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

RegionRndHostVenueCityState
East1&2University of VirginiaUniversity Hall (University of Virginia)CharlottesvilleVirginia
East1&2University of ConnecticutHarry A. Gampel PavilionStorrsConnecticut
East1&2University of AlabamaColeman ColiseumTuscaloosaAlabama
East1&2Louisiana Tech UniversityThomas Assembly CenterRustonLouisiana
Mideast1&2Western Kentucky UniversityE.A. Diddle ArenaBowling GreenKentucky
Mideast1&2University of WashingtonHec Edmundson PavilionSeattleWashington
Mideast1&2University of TennesseeThompson-Boling ArenaKnoxvilleTennessee
Mideast1&2Texas Tech UniversityLubbock Municipal ColiseumLubbockTexas
Midwest1&2University of GeorgiaGeorgia Coliseum (Stegeman Coliseum)AthensGeorgia
Midwest1&2Pennsylvania State UniversityRecreation Building (Rec Hall)University ParkPennsylvania
Midwest1&2University of ColoradoCU Events Center (Coors Events Center)BoulderColorado
Midwest1&2George Washington UniversityCharles E. Smith Athletic CenterWashingtonDistrict of Columbia
West1&2University of North CarolinaCarmichael AuditoriumChapel HillNorth Carolina
West1&2Vanderbilt UniversityMemorial Gymnasium (Vanderbilt University)NashvilleTennessee
West1&2Stanford UniversityMaples PavilionStanfordCalifornia
West1&2San Diego StatePeterson GymSan DiegoCalifornia

Regionals and Final Four

Storrs
Knoxville
Los Angeles
Des Moines
Minneapolis
1995 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 April 1 and April 2 in Minneapolis, Minnesota at the Target Center,

Bids by state

The sixty-four teams came from thirty-three states, plus Washington, D.C. California had the most teams with five bids. Seventeen states did not have any teams receiving bids.[8]

NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 1995
BidsStateTeams
5CaliforniaSan Francisco, Stanford, UC Irvine, San Diego St., Southern California
4TennesseeTennessee St., Vanderbilt, Memphis, Tennessee
4VirginiaOld Dominion, Radford, Virginia, Virginia Tech
3FloridaFIU, Florida A&M, Florida
3MississippiJackson St., Southern Miss., Ole Miss
3OregonOregon, Oregon St., Portland
3TexasStephen F. Austin, Texas Tech, SMU
3IllinoisNorthern Illinois, Western Illinois, DePaul
3North CarolinaNorth Carolina, Duke, North Carolina St.
2IndianaIndiana, Purdue
2KentuckyWestern Ky., Louisville
2LouisianaLouisiana Tech, Tulane
2MarylandLoyola Md, Mt. St. Mary's
2OhioToledo, Ohio
2OklahomaOklahoma, Oklahoma St.
2PennsylvaniaPenn St., St. Joseph's
2WisconsinMarquette, Wisconsin
1AlabamaAlabama
1ArkansasArkansas
1ColoradoColorado
1ConnecticutConnecticut
1District of ColumbiaGeorge Washington
1GeorgiaGeorgia
1IowaDrake
1KansasKansas
1MaineMaine
1MassachusettsHoly Cross
1MissouriMissouri St.
1MontanaMontana
1New HampshireDartmouth
1New JerseySeton Hall
1South CarolinaFurman
1UtahUtah
1WashingtonWashington

Bracket

East region - Storrs, Connecticut

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1Connecticut105
16Maine75
1Connecticut91
Storrs, CT
8Virginia Tech45
8Virginia Tech62
9St. Joseph's52
1Connecticut87
4Alabama56
5Duke76
12Oklahoma State64
5Duke120
Tuscaloosa, AL
4Alabama1214OT
4Alabama82
13Mt. St. Mary's55
1Connecticut67
3Virginia63
6Florida89
11Radford49
6Florida67
Charlottesville, VA
3Virginia72
3Virginia71
14Dartmouth68
3Virginia63
2Louisiana Tech62
7Oklahoma90
10Loyola-MD55
7Oklahoma36
Ruston, LA
2Louisiana Tech48
2Louisiana Tech90
15Furman52

West region - Los Angeles, California

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1Vanderbilt90
16Northern Illinois44
1Vanderbilt95
Nashville, TN
8Memphis68
8Memphis74
9USC72
1Vanderbilt66
4Purdue67
5San Diego St.46
12Montana57
12Montana51
San Diego, CA
4Purdue62
4Purdue74
13Portland59
4Purdue58
2Stanford69
6Seton Hall73
11Stephen F. Austin63
6Seton Hall45
Chapel Hill, NC
3North Carolina59
3North Carolina89
14Western Illinois48
3North Carolina71
2Stanford81
7Southern Mississippi95
10Southern Methodist96OT
10Southern Methodist73
Stanford, CA
2Stanford95
2Stanford88
15UC-Irvine55

Mideast region - Knoxville, Tennessee

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1Tennessee96
16Florida A&M59
1Tennessee70
Knoxville, TN
9Florida International44
8Old Dominion76
9Florida International81
1Tennessee87
4Western Kentucky65
5Oregon State88OT
12Tennessee State75
5Oregon State78
Bowling Green, KY
4Western Kentucky85
4Western Kentucky77
13Toledo63
1Tennessee80
2Texas Tech59
6Arkansas67
11San Francisco58
6Arkansas50
Seattle, WA
3Washington54
3Washington73
14Ohio56
3Washington52
2Texas Tech67
7Kansas72
10Wisconsin73
10Wisconsin65
Lubbock, Texas
2Texas Tech88
2Texas Tech87
15Tulane72

Midwest region - Des Moines, Iowa

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1Colorado83
16Holy Cross49
1Colorado78
Boulder, CO
9Southwest Missouri State34
8Utah47
9Southwest Missouri State49
1Colorado77
4George Washington61
5Drake87OT
12Ole Miss81
5Drake93
Washington, DC
4George Washington96OT
4George Washington87
13DePaul79
1Colorado79
3Georgia82
6Oregon65
11Louisville67
11Louisville68
Athens, GA
3Georgia81
3Georgia81
14Indiana64
3Georgia98
7North Carolina State79
7North Carolina State77
10Marquette62
7North Carolina State76
University Park, PA
2Penn State74
2Penn State75
15Jackson State62

Final Four – Minneapolis, Minnesota

National semifinals
April 1
National Finals
April 2
      
1EConnecticut87
2WStanford60
1EConnecticut70
1METennessee64
1METennessee73
3MWGeorgia51

* denotes number of overtime periods

Record by conference

Seventeen conferences had more than one bid, or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play:[8]

Conference# of BidsRecordWin %Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Southeastern715–7.68264221
Pacific-1057–5.5833211
Atlantic Coast48–4.667431
Big Ten45–4.556311
Big Eight44–4.500211
Metro42–4.3332
Great Midwest31–3.2501
Big East27–1.87521111
Southwest24–2.667211
Sun Belt24–2.66722
Atlantic 1022–2.50011
Missouri Valley22–2.5002
Mid-American20–2
West Coast20–2
Western Athletic20–2
Big Sky11–1.5001
Trans America11–1.5001

Fifteen conferences went 0-1: Big South Conference, Big West Conference, Colonial, Ivy League, MAAC, Mid-Continent, MEAC, Midwestern Collegiate, North Atlantic Conference, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southern Conference, Southland, and SWAC[8]

All-Tournament team

Game officials

  • Sally Bell (semifinal)
  • Art Bomengen (semifinal)
  • Violet Palmer (semifinal)
  • Sidney Bunch (semifinal)
  • Dee Kantner (final)
  • Larry Sheppard (final) [8]

See also

References