Season 2012–13 Teams 64 | Dates 23 Mar 2013 – 9 Apr 2013 Finals site Smoothie King Center | |
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Champions Connecticut (8th title, 8th title game,
14th Final Four) Runner-up Louisville (2nd title game) Semifinalists California (1st Final Four)
Notre Dame (5th Final Four) Winning coach Geno Auriemma (8th title) MOP Breanna Stewart Connecticut Champion Connecticut Huskies women's basketball Similar 2014 NCAA Division I, 2009 NCAA Division I, 2004 NCAA Division I, 2013 NCAA Division I, 2001 NCAA Division I |
The 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament was played from March 23 through April 9, 2013. Tennessee continued its streak of making every NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at 32 consecutive appearances. Kansas made the Regional Semifinals for the second year in a row as a double-digit seed, UConn made it into the Final Four for the sixth consecutive year, the longest such streak, and Louisville became the first team seeded lower than fourth in a region to advance to the championship game. For the first time in tournament history, the same four teams were #1 seeds as in the previous year.
Contents
Subregionals
The format is similar to the Men's Tournament, except that there are 64 teams; this in turn means there is no "First Four" round. Thirty-one automatic bids for conference champions and 33 at-large bids are available.
The subregionals will be played from March 23 through March 26. Sites chosen to host first- and second-round games in 2013 include:
Regionals and Final Four
The Regionals, named for the city rather than the region of geographic importance since 2005, which will be held from March 30 to April 2, will be at these sites:
A regional had been scheduled at Sun National Bank Center in Trenton, New Jersey. However, the NCAA moved the regional to Connecticut because of a recently passed state law allowing single-game betting for professional and collegiate games. NCAA rules do not allow tournament events to be held in states that allow single-game betting.
The Final Four will be held on April 7 & 9 at the New Orleans Arena in New Orleans, hosted by the University of New Orleans. This is the third time the Final Four will be played in New Orleans. The event was held in this city in 1991, at the Kiefer Lakefront UNO Arena. The event returned to the city in 2004, when the games were held at the New Orleans Arena.
Tournament records
Automatic qualifiers
The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2013 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).
Tournament seeds
Kentucky vs. Navy, Oklahoma State vs. Duke, and Notre Dame vs. Iowa aired on ESPNU. Purdue vs. Louisville aired on ESPNEWS. All other first and second round games aired on ESPN2
Oklahoma City Regional
Almost all first-round games were won by the higher-seeded team except for Creighton, the 10 seed who upset Syracuse 61–56. The top seed, Baylor won easily, by 42 points over Prairie View A&M. The only other game within single digit margin was 6 seed Oklahoma beating Central Michigan by five points.
In the second round, three of the four games followed expectations, with the only upset being the 5 seed Louisville over 4 seed Purdue. In the third round, 2 seed Tennessee beat 6 seed Oklahoma as expected, but Louisville upset top seeded Baylor in a result some have called one of the greatest upsets in women's basketball history. Baylor won the National Championship in 2012, going undefeated during the season, and had returned every starter. While they lost one game in the current regular season, point guard Odyssey Sims was injured early in that game. The team had not lost a game in two years when playing at full strength. Louisville, the third best team in the Big East, hit sixteen of 25 three point attempts, and held Griner to 14 points, after she had averaged 33 points in the first two games.
Bracket
* – Denotes overtime period
All-Tournament Team
Game officials
Television
ESPN has US television rights to all games during the tournament. For the first and second round, ESPN airs select games nationally on ESPN, ESPNU, or ESPNews. All other games are aired regionally on ESPN or ESPN2 and streamed online via ESPN3. Most of the nation gets whip-a-round coverage during this time, which allows ESPN to rotate between the games and focus on the nation on the one that is the closest. The regional semifinals are split between ESPN and ESPN2, and ESPN airs the regional finals, national semifinals, and championship match.
Studio host and analysts
Radio
Dial Global Sports has exclusive radio rights from the regional finals on through the championship.