Big East Women's Basketball Tournament
2009 Tournament logo.
The Big East Women's Basketball Tournament is a conference championship tournament in women's basketball. It was first held in 1983, at the end of the 1982–83 college basketball season that was the first in which the original Big East Conference sponsored women's basketball. The tournament was conducted by the original Big East through 2013. Since the 2013 split of the conference along football lines, the tournament is conducted by a new, non-football league also known as the Big East Conference.[1] The tournament determines the conference's champion, which receives an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. From 2004 through 2013, the tournament was held in the Veterans Memorial Coliseum[2] at the XL Center (formerly known as the Hartford Civic Center). The 2014 edition was hosted by DePaul University, with opening-round games played at McGrath–Phillips Arena on the school's Chicago campus and all other games played at Allstate Arena in suburban Rosemont. The 2015 tournament was also hosted by DePaul, with all games at Allstate Arena.
Starting in 2009, the tournament expanded to include all 16 of the conference's teams at that time. The teams finishing 9 through 16 in the regular season standings played first round games, while teams 5 through 8 receive a bye to the second round. The top 4 teams during the regular season receive a double-bye to the quarterfinals.[3] The 2013 tournament, the final one under the original Big East structure, saw 15 teams participate, following West Virginia's 2012 move to the Big 12 Conference. The tournament now features all 10 members of the current conference.
History of the Tournament Finals
Year |
Seed [2] |
Winner |
Score |
Seed |
Opponent |
Venue |
1983 |
#2 |
St. John's |
74-63 |
#1 |
Providence |
Alumni Hall (Providence, RI) |
1984 |
#3 |
St. John's |
66-46 |
#4 |
Seton Hall |
Alumni Hall (now Carnesecca Arena) (Queens, NY) |
1985 |
#5 |
Syracuse |
57-56 |
#2 |
Villanova |
Manley Field House (Syracuse NY) |
1986 |
#2 |
Villanova |
71-60 |
#1 |
Providence |
Roberts Center (Chestnut Hill, MA) |
1987 |
#1 |
Villanova |
60-45 |
#6 |
Boston College |
The Pavilion (Villanova, PA) |
1988 |
#3 |
St. John's |
74-72 OT |
#1 |
Syracuse |
Fitzgerald Field House (Pittsburgh, PA) |
1989 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
84-65 |
#3 |
Providence |
Walsh Gymnasium (Providence RI) |
1990 |
#2 |
Providence |
82-61 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, CT) |
1991 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
79-74 |
#2 |
Providence |
McDonough Gymnasium (Washington, DC) |
1992 |
#1 |
Miami (FL) |
56-47 |
#2 |
Connecticut |
Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, CT) |
1993 |
#1 |
Miami (FL) |
77-56 |
#7 |
Providence |
Alumni Hall (Providence, RI) |
1994 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
77-51 |
#2 |
Seton Hall |
Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, CT) |
1995 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
85-49 |
#3 |
Seton Hall |
Walsh Gymnasium (South Orange, NJ) |
1996 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
71-54 |
#3 |
Notre Dame |
Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, CT) |
1997 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
86-77 |
#3 |
Notre Dame |
Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, CT) |
1998 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
67-58 |
#2 |
Rutgers |
Louis Brown Athletic Center (The RAC) (Piscataway, NJ) |
1999 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
96-75 |
#3 |
Notre Dame |
Louis Brown Athletic Center (The RAC) (Piscataway, NJ) |
2000 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
79-59 |
#3 |
Rutgers |
Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, CT) |
2001 |
#2 |
Connecticut |
78-76 |
#1 |
Notre Dame |
Gampel Pavilion (Storrs, CT) |
2002 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
96-54 |
#3 |
Boston College |
Louis Brown Athletic Center (The RAC) (Piscataway, NJ) |
2003 |
#3 |
Villanova |
52-48 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
Louis Brown Athletic Center (The RAC) (Piscataway, NJ) |
2004 |
#5 |
Boston College |
75-57 |
#7 |
Rutgers |
Hartford Civic Center (Hartford, CT) |
2005 |
#3 |
Connecticut |
67-51 |
#1 |
Rutgers |
Hartford Civic Center (Hartford, CT) |
2006 |
#2 |
Connecticut |
50-44 |
#12 |
West Virginia |
Hartford Civic Center (Hartford, CT) |
2007 |
#2 |
Rutgers |
55-47 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
Hartford Civic Center (Hartford, CT) |
2008 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
65-59 |
#7 |
Louisville |
XL Center (Hartford, CT) |
2009 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
75-36 |
#2 |
Louisville |
XL Center (Hartford, CT) |
2010 |
#1 |
Connecticut |
60–32 |
#2 |
West Virginia |
XL Center (Hartford, CT)[4] |
2011 |
# |
Connecticut |
73-64 |
# |
Notre Dame |
XL Center (Hartford, CT)[5] |
2012 |
# |
Connecticut |
63–54 |
# |
Notre Dame |
XL Center (Hartford, CT)[6] |
2013 |
#2 |
Notre Dame |
61-59 |
#3 |
Connecticut |
XL Center (Hartford, CT)[7] |
2014 |
#1 |
DePaul |
65-57 |
#2 |
St. John's |
Allstate Arena (Rosemont, IL) (Opening round: McGrath–Phillips Arena, Chicago) |
2015 |
#2 |
DePaul |
78-68 |
#1 |
Seton Hall |
Allstate Arena (Rosemont, IL) |
Performance by school
Club |
Winners |
Winning years |
Connecticut[a 1] |
18 |
1989, 1991, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 |
St. John's |
3 |
1983, 1984, 1988 |
Villanova |
3 |
1986, 1987, 2003 |
DePaul |
2 |
2014, 2015 |
Miami (FL)[a 2] |
2 |
1992, 1993 |
Notre Dame[a 3] |
1 |
2013 |
Syracuse[a 3] |
1 |
1985 |
Providence |
1 |
1990 |
Boston College[a 4] |
1 |
2004 |
Rutgers[a 1] |
1 |
2007 |
TOTAL |
32 |
|
- 1 2 Following the 2013 split of the original Big East, Connecticut and Rutgers remained in the football-sponsoring portion now known as the American Athletic Conference.
- ↑ Miami left for the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) in 2004.
- 1 2 Notre Dame and Syracuse left for the ACC in 2013.
- ↑ Boston College left for the ACC in 2005.
Most Outstanding Player
Year |
Most Outstanding Player |
School |
1983 |
Beckford, DebbieDebbie Beckford |
St. John's |
1984 |
MacnameeAnne Marie McNamee |
St. John's |
1985 |
Long, JaniceJanice Long |
Syracuse |
1986 |
Pennefather, ShellyShelly Pennefather |
Villanova |
1987 |
Pennefather, ShellyShelly Pennefather (2) |
Villanova |
1988 |
Johnson, SabrinaSabrina Johnson |
St. John's |
1989 |
Bascom, KerryKerry Bascom |
Connecticut |
1990 |
Mangum, AndreaAndrea Mangum |
Providence |
1991 |
Pattyson, MeghanMeghan Pattyson |
Connecticut |
1992 |
Savage, FrancesFrances Savage |
Miami |
1993 |
Plowden, VickiVicki Plowden |
Miami |
1994 |
Lobo, RebeccaRebecca Lobo |
Connecticut |
1995 |
Wolters, KaraKara Wolters |
Connecticut |
1996 |
Wolters, KaraKara Wolters (2) |
Connecticut |
1997 |
Sales, NykeshaNykesha Sales |
Connecticut |
1998 |
Williams, RitaRita Williams |
Connecticut |
1999 |
Ralph, SheaShea Ralph |
Connecticut |
2000 |
Williams, TamikaTamika Williams |
Connecticut |
2001 |
Taurasi, DianaDiana Taurasi |
Connecticut |
2002 |
Jones, AsjhaAsjha Jones |
Connecticut |
2003 |
Juhline, TrishTrish Juhline |
Villanova |
2004 |
Deveny, JessalynJessalyn Deveny |
Boston College |
2005 |
Turner, BarbaraBarbara Turner |
Connecticut |
2006 |
Strother, AnnAnn Strother |
Connecticut |
2007 |
Ajavon, MateeMatee Ajavon |
Rutgers |
2008 |
Houston, ChardeCharde Houston |
Connecticut |
2009 |
Moore, MayaMaya Moore |
Connecticut |
2010 |
Greene, KalanaKalana Greene |
Connecticut |
2011 |
Moore, MayaMaya Moore (2) |
Connecticut |
2012 |
Mosqueda-Lewis, KaleenaKaleena Mosqueda-Lewis |
Connecticut |
2013 |
MacbrideKayla McBride |
Notre Dame |
2014 |
Penny, JasmineJasmine Penny |
DePaul |
2014 |
Podkowa, MeganMegan Podkowa |
DePaul |
Years |
Title of Award |
1998-present |
Most Outstanding Player |
1994-1997 |
Most Outstanding Performer |
1983-1993 |
Most Valuable Player |
References
|
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| Teams | |
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| Championships & awards | |
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| Seasons |
- 1981–82
- 1982–83
- 1983–84
- 1984–85
- 1985–86
- 1986–87
- 1987–88
- 1988–89
- 1989–90
- 1990–91
- 1991–92
- 1992–93
- 1993–94
- 1994–95
- 1995–96
- 1996–97
- 1997–98
- 1998–99
- 1999–00
- 2000–01
- 2001–02
- 2002–03
- 2003–04
- 2004–05
- 2005–06
- 2006–07
- 2007–08
- 2008–09
- 2009–10
- 2010–11
- 2011–12
- 2012–13
- 2013–14
- 2014–15
- 2015–16
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NCAA women's college basketball tournaments (United States) |
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| Division I postseason conference tournaments | |
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| Division I postseason tournaments | |
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| Division II and III postseason tournaments | |
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