NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament


The NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Championship is the annual tournament to determine the national champions of women's NCAA Division III collegiate basketball in the United States. It has been held annually since 1982 when the NCAA began to sponsor women's sports at all three levels.
Washington–St. Louis is the most successful program with five national titles. The most recent champion was Thomas More, which was unable to defend the title as it rejoined the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics.

History

1982 Final Four

Held in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, the 1982 Women's Final Four Basketball Tournament was the first sponsored by the NCAA. Featuring host Elizabethtown College, Clark College, Pomona College and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, the tournament was played in a classic field house over a three-day period. In the first game of the National Semi-Final Elizabethtown took control right from the tip-off against Clark and easily cruised to a 71-51 victory. In the second game of the Final Four Pomona took the lead early in the game, but UNC Greensboro battled back to tie the game at 56 with six minutes to play. UNC Greensboro then went on a run and pulled away for a 77-66 win. Elizabethtown and UNC Greensboro turned the championship game into an epic battle of lead changes and shifts in momentum. Last second heroics by UNC Greensboro sent the game into overtime, but Elizabethtown came up with the final stop in overtime to win 67-66 in overtime. Television coverage was provided by a fledgling ESPN while exclusive radio coverage was provided by KSPC Radio - Pomona College's tiny KSPC sports broadcasting group with Geoff Willis and James Timmerman providing the play by play and color. ESPN was so embryonic that the game was broadcast multiple times during the following two weeks and ESPN hired the KSPC Radio staff to help with background and color research about the players and the teams.

Results

Championships

Schools in italics no longer compete in NCAA Division III.
SchoolTitlesYears
Washington 51998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2010
Amherst32011, 2017, 2018
DePauw22007, 2013
Hope21990, 2006
Wisconsin-Stevens Point21987, 2002
Capital21994, 1995
Elizabethtown21982, 1989
Thomas More^22016, 2019
Fairleigh Dickinson–Florham12014
Illinois Wesleyan12012
George Fox12009
Howard Payne12008
Millikin12005
Wilmington 12004
Trinity 12003
NYU11997
Wisconsin–Oshkosh11996
Central 11993
Alma11992
St. Thomas 11991
Concordia 11988
Salem State11986
Scranton11985
Rust11984
North Central 11983

^ 2015 championship vacated by Thomas More, which returned to the NAIA effective in 2019–20.

Final Fours

Schools in italics no longer compete in NCAA Division III.
AppearancesSchool
10Washington
8Amherst, Scranton
6St. Thomas
5Capital, Southern Maine
4Elizabethtown, Salem State, Thomas More, Tufts
3DePauw, Eastern Connecticut, George Fox, Hope, NYU, Rochester, UW–Eau Claire, UW–Stevens Point, UW–Whitewater
2Centre, Christopher Newport, Clark, Concordia–Moorhead, Illinois Wesleyan, Messiah, Millikin, Mount Union, North Central, Rust, Saint Benedict, St. John Fisher, UNC Greensboro, UW–Oshkosh, Bowdoin, Wartburg

Footnotes