2008 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament


The 2008 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament involved 64 teams playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the 2007–08 national champion of women's NCAA Division I college basketball. It commenced on March 22, 2008, and concluded when the University of Tennessee Lady Volunteers defeated the Stanford University Cardinal 64–48 on April 8, 2008 at the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa, Florida.

Notable events

The preliminary rounds largely followed the seeding, with every number one and number two seed advancing to the regional finals. In the Greensboro and Oklahoma City Regionals, the top seeds Connecticut and Tennessee won respectively to head to the Final Four. Connecticut had to beat Big East rival Rutgers to make the advance. Tennessee' Candace Parker was injured in the game against Texas A&M and had to leave twice, and be fitted with a sleeve to stabilize her shoulder. She still scored 26 points in a game which was won by only eight.
In the other two regionals, the two seeds prevailed. In the New Orleans Regional, LSU beat North Carolina to reach the Final Four for the fifth consecutive time, tying a record set by Connecticut between 2000 and 2004. In the Spokane Regional, Stanford beat the top seed Maryland to go to their first Final Four since 1997, but one that would be the first of a five-year string of consecutive Final Four appearances.
Connecticut and Stanford met in one semifinal. They had played each other earlier in the season at the Paradise Jam held in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands in November. The Huskies had won that game 66–54, but the team had been at full strength. Subsequent to that game Mel Thomas and Kalana Greene both starters, had season ending injuries. Connecticut cut a Stanford lead to a single point, 47–46 when Candice Wiggins hit two three-pointers to start a 10–0 run. Wiggins would go on to score 25 points in the game and would be named the Women's Basketball Coaches Association national player of the year. The Cardinal went on to win the game, and advance to the national championship.
The game between SEC foes Tennessee and LSU didn't win style points, and was described by the New York Times as "one of the ugliest games played this or any season". Tennessee led early opening up a ten-point lead at 37–27, but LSU responded with a 10–0 run to tie the game. With seconds left in the game LSU hit two free throws to take a one-point lead. Tennessee inbounded the ball to Candace Parker who passed it inside to Nicky Anosike, but her shot was deflected to Alexis Hornbuckle, who had missed seven of her field goal attempts. With under one second remaining, Hornhuckle caught the deflection and hit the winning basket. The Lady Vols won 47–46, as the two teams combined scores set an NCAA record for the fewest points scored in a semifinal game.
LSU fell to 0-5 in the Women's Final Four. Combined with the 0-6 mark of the men's team, LSU's 0-11 all-time combined Final Four mark is the worst for schools which have made multiple appearances in both the men's and women's Final Fours.
After the drama of a one-point game in the semifinal, the final game was anti-climactic. The Lady Vols pulled out to a 30–19 lead, and the Stanford Cardinal were unable to close the gap. The win gave Tennessee their second consecutive national championship and a career total of 982 wins, the most of any coach in basketball, men's or women's, along with eight national championships for coach Pat Summitt.

Subregionals

Once again, the system was the same as the Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, with the exception that only 64 teams received bids, and there was no play-in game. Automatic bids were secured by 31 conference champions and 33 at-large bids.
The subregionals, which once again used the "pod system", keeping most teams at or close to the home cities, were held from March 22 to March 25 at these locations:
in Bridgeport, Connecticut.
This was the fourth and final year that eight sites hosted subregional games. The committee, in September 2007, voted to return to the 16-site format for the early rounds starting with the 2009 tournament.

Regionals

The regions were held from March 29 to April 1 in the following regions:
The regional winners advanced to the Final Four, held April 6 and 8, 2008 at the Tampa Bay Times Forum, in Tampa, Florida, hosted by the University of South Florida. USF and the Tampa Bay Times Forum also hosted a first and second round Men's Tournament subregional on March 21 and 23. Also, akin to the men's tournament, at the regional sites, the NCAA installed floors that were custom made for the first time.

Tournament records

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2008 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2008 NCAA tournament. Of these thirty-one automatic bids, a total of 30 teams receive automatic bids for winning their conference tournament championship. The Ivy League does not hold a tournament, so its regular season champion receives the automatic bid. Because Cornell, Dartmouth, and Harvard finished in a tie for first place, Ivy League rules called for a two-game stepladder playoff. Dartmouth defeated Harvard in the first game and went on to face Cornell for the automatic bid, which Cornell won 64-47.

Qualifying teams – at-large

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

Tournament seeds

Bids by conference

Thirty-one conferences earned an automatic bid. In twenty-two cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-three additional at-large teams were selected from nine of the conferences.
BidsConferenceTeams
8Big 12Texas A&M, Baylor, Iowa St., Kansas St., Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St., Texas
8Big EastConnecticut, DePaul, Louisville, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, Syracuse, West Virginia
6Atlantic CoastNorth Carolina, Duke, Florida St., Georgia Tech, Maryland., Virginia
5SoutheasternTennessee, Auburn, Georgia, LSU, Vanderbilt
4Big TenPurdue, Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio St.
3Atlantic 10Xavier, George Washington, Temple
3Mountain WestNew Mexico, Utah, Wyoming
3Pacific-10Stanford, Arizona St., California
2Conference USASMU, UTEP
1America EastHartford
1Atlantic SunEast Tenn. St.
1Big SkyMontana
1Big SouthLiberty
1Big WestUC Santa Barb.
1ColonialOld Dominion
1HorizonCleveland St.
1IvyCornell
1Metro AtlanticMarist
1Mid-AmericanMiami Ohio
1Mid-EasternCoppin St.
1Missouri ValleyIllinois St.
1NortheastRobert Morris
1Ohio ValleyMurray St.
1PatriotBucknell
1SouthernChattanooga
1SouthlandUTSA
1SouthwesternJackson St.
1SummitOral Roberts
1Sun BeltWestern Kỳ.
1West CoastSan Diego
1Western AthleticFresno St.

Bids by state

The sixty-four teams came from thirty states, plus Washington, D.C. Texas had the most teams with six bids. Twenty states did not have any teams receiving bids.
BidsStateTeams
6TexasSMU, Texas A&M, UTSA, Baylor, Texas, UTEP
5CaliforniaFresno St., San Diego, Stanford, UC Santa Barb., California
4OhioCleveland St., Miami Ohio, Xavier, Ohio St.
4PennsylvaniaBucknell, Robert Morris, Pittsburgh, Temple
4TennesseeChattanooga, East Tenn. St., Tennessee, Vanderbilt
3KentuckyMurray St., Western Kỳ., Louisville
3New YorkCornell, Marist, Syracuse
3OklahomaOral Roberts, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St.
3VirginiaLiberty, Old Dominion, Virginia
2ConnecticutConnecticut, Hartford
2GeorgiaGeorgia, Georgia Tech
2IllinoisIllinois St., DePaul
2IndianaPurdue, Notre Dame
2IowaIowa, Iowa St.
2MarylandCoppin St., Maryland.
2North CarolinaNorth Carolina, Duke
1UtahUtah
1AlabamaAuburn
1ArizonaArizona St.
1District of ColumbiaGeorge Washington
1FloridaFlorida St.
1KansasKansas St.
1LouisianaLSU
1MinnesotaMinnesota
1MississippiJackson St.
1MontanaMontana
1NebraskaNebraska
1New JerseyRutgers
1New MexicoNew Mexico
1West VirginiaWest Virginia
1WyomingWyoming

Bracket

Data source

NOTE: All initials used are the same in the official NCAA Bracket in External Links listed below.

Greensboro">Greensboro, North Carolina">Greensboro Regional

Spokane">Spokane, Washington">Spokane Regional

[New Orleans] Regional

Oklahoma City">Oklahoma City, Oklahoma">Oklahoma City Regional

Final Four – [St. Pete Times Forum], [Tampa, Florida]

Initials: GRE-Greensboro; SPO-Spokane; NOR-New Orleans; OKC-Oklahoma City.
* – Denotes overtime period

Record by conference

Conference# of
Bids
RecordWin %Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Colonial12-10.6671---
Big East814-80.636521-
SEC513-40.7653221
ACC610-60.62532--
Pac-1037-30.7001111
Big 12811-80.57921--
Atlantic 1032-30.4001---
MAAC11-10.500----
America East11-10.500----
Big Ten41-40.200----
Mountain West30-30.000----
Conference USA21-20.500----

Nineteen conferences — Atlantic Sun Conference, Big Sky Conference, Big South Conference, Big West Conference, Horizon League, Ivy League, MAC, MEAC, Missouri Valley Conference, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southern Conference, Southland, SWAC, Sun Belt Conference, Summit League, WAC and West Coast Conference — went 0-1.

All-Tournament Team