2021 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 2021 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament was a single-elimination tournament of 64 teams to determine the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college basketball national champion for the 2020–21 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The 39th edition of the tournament began on March 21, 2021, in sites around San Antonio, Texas, and concluded with the championship game on April 4 at the Alamodome, with the Stanford Cardinal defeating the Arizona Wildcats 54–53 to win their third NCAA title.

2021 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Season2020–21
Teams64
Finals siteAlamodome
San Antonio, Texas
ChampionsStanford Cardinal (3rd title, 5th title game,
14th Final Four)
Runner-upArizona Wildcats (1st title game,
1st Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachTara VanDerveer (3rd title)
MOPHaley Jones (Stanford)
NCAA Division I women's tournaments
«20202022»

Due to logistical considerations surrounding the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic (which resulted in the cancellation of the 2020 tournament), and mirroring a similar decision by the men's tournament, the entire tournament was played in the San Antonio area rather than at sites across the country, with some first and second round games played in nearby San Marcos and Austin. The Alamodome hosted all games from the regional semifinals onward, including the originally-awarded Final Four and championship game.

Four schools, America East champion Stony Brook, Big South champion High Point, Missouri Valley champion Bradley and Utah Valley from the WAC (California Baptist won the WAC tournament, but was ineligible for the NCAA tournament because it is in the third year of a four-year transition from Division II), made their first appearance in the tournament.

Additionally, Tennessee continued its record streak of making every edition of the tournament. Arizona made its first-ever appearance in the Final Four. UConn extended its record streak of 13 consecutive Final Four appearances. Wake Forest and Washington State made their first appearances since 1988 and 1991, respectively.

Tournament procedure

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The tournament's 64 teams consisted of the 31 conference champions (down from 32, due to the Ivy League having cancelled all winter athletics due to COVID-19),[1] and 33 "at-large" bids extended by the Selection Committee.

This tournament was the first since 1983 in which the RPI was not used in the selection process. On May 4, 2020, the NCAA announced that it would replace the RPI with the NET (NCAA Evaluation Tool), a metric that has been used in the selection process for the men's tournament since 2019. The women's version of the NET uses input data specific to the women's game but is otherwise functionally identical to the men's version.[2]

Schedule and venues

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On February 5, 2021, the NCAA announced that due to logistical considerations associated with the COVID-19 pandemic (which prompted the cancellation of the 2020 tournament), the entirety of the tournament would be conducted at sites in and around San Antonio and Austin (mirroring a similar decision for the men's tournament, which would similarly use venues in and around its Final Four host city of Indianapolis), rather than across the country;[3]

San Antonio
Austin
San Marcos
2021 NCAA tournament venues

First and second round (March 21–22, 23–24)

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight) (March 27–30)

  • Alamodome, San Antonio (Hosts: the University of the Incarnate Word and the University of Texas at San Antonio)

National semifinals and championship (final Four and championship) (April 2 and 4)

  • Alamodome, San Antonio (Hosts: the University of the Incarnate Word, the University of Texas at San Antonio, and San Antonio Sports)

The Alamodome had two courts for first- and second-round games, and was converted to a single court for later rounds. Practices were held at the Alamodome and the Henry B. González Convention Center.[4] The regions were named after famous sites in San Antonio: the Alamo, the HemisFair, the Mercado, and the River Walk.[5]

All games were played behind closed doors (with only friends and family present) until the Sweet Sixteen at the Alamodome, which operated at 17% capacity (10,880) for the remainder of the tournament.[6]

Facilities inequality

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Concerns over gender inequality were raised prior to the tournament, citing differences in the quality of facilities and amenities between the women's and men's tournament; among other examples, Arizona coach Adia Barnes criticized the lack of weight training equipment in the workout room (consisting of only a single tower of weights, in comparison to the larger weight room of the men's tournament). A video by Oregon forward Sedona Prince showing the aforementioned weight room drew wider attention to the disparity on social media.[7] Other forms of disparities were noted, including differing COVID-19 testing protocols, smaller "swag bags", and different food options.[8][7]

The NCAA had originally planned for the full weight room to only become available for the Sweet Sixteen round.[7] Vice President of Women's Basketball Lynn Holzman stated that the NCAA had planned to expand the facilities in the workout room over the course of the tournament due to space constraints, but were "actively working to enhance existing resources at practice courts, including additional weight training equipment." Barnes stated that the Henry B. González Convention Center had "plenty of open areas" that could have been used, and that "it takes people like me that were pro players being a voice for things to change. There's a lot of voices out there. People care now. The fact that the NCAA responded so fast, I think that's good. That's meaningful."[9][10][7]

In a letter obtained by tournament broadcaster ESPN on March 22, NCAA president Mark Emmert stated that "much has been resolved", but that he would investigate "exactly how we found ourselves in this situation", and "directed our leadership team and appropriate staff to assess all the services, resources, and facilities provided to both the men's and women's teams so that we have a completely clear comparison".[11] The America East Conference and Ivy League sent a letter to Emmert, arguing that the incident "warrants a comprehensive discussion once the tournaments conclude about how we—national office staff and membership—can protect and ensure equity across all championships in the future, but especially in the sport of basketball."[7]

The incident led to discussions surrounding other forms of inequalities between the men's and women's tournaments, including their difference in budget, no revenue bonuses awarded to schools for winning the tournament, NCAA marketing of "March Madness" having focused almost exclusively on the men's tournament (with the women's tournament having never officially used the name; and tournament branding often used generic "NCAA Women's Basketball" logos instead),[12] and the men's tournament often being referred to as "the NCAA tournament" by media and the general public with no disambiguation.[7] In a Sportico op-ed, America East commissioner Amy Huchthausen accused the NCAA of "restricting women’s basketball from taking advantage of an emerging market", noting that the NCAA's official sponsorships are managed by the CBS Sports/Turner Sports consortium that broadcasts the men's tournament, and that the ESPN contract to televise the women's tournament (which is bundled with those of other NCAA championships) "provides a measure of financial certainty, but it does not provide women's basketball (or any of the other sports, for that matter) an incentive to grow".[13][14]

The NCAA commissioned an independent review of gender equality among all of its championships[8] by the law firm Kaplan Hecker & Fink LLP; the first phase, focusing specifically on NCAA basketball championships, was published on August 3, 2021. The review concluded that the structure of the NCAA's operations were designed to "maximize the value of and support to the Division I Men's Basketball Championship as the primary source of funding for the NCAA and its membership"; it found that the CBS/Turner sponsorship contracts require advertisers to pay for marketing rights across all of the NCAA's championships (including the men's tournament, which can be costly), and that advertisers also had to separately pay ESPN for airtime during the women's tournament's telecasts. The review included several recommendations, including that:[15][16][7]

  • The media rights for the women's Division I basketball tournament be sold separately from other NCAA championships. It was estimated that media rights to the women's tournament could be worth at least $81 million per-season (in comparison to the $34 million total of the current ESPN contract).
  • The women's tournament be expanded to 68 teams, as with the men's tournament.
  • The women's tournament adopt the same revenue distribution framework as the men's tournament.
  • The NCAA's contracts be renegotiated to provide more opportunities for entities who wish to sponsor specific NCAA championships other than the men's basketball tournament.
  • The "March Madness" branding be extended to the women's tournament.
  • The men's and women's Final Four be hosted together in the same venue.

The NCAA implemented two of these recommendations—the expansion to a 68-team format, and use of the "March Madness" branding—for the 2022 tournament.[17][12] The NCAA renewed its contract with ESPN in January 2024 under an eight-year contract, now valued at an average of $115 million per-season, and granting ESPN additional rights to sell sponsorships for its tournament broadcasts.[18]

Original 2021 NCAA tournament schedule and venues

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Albany
Cedar Park
Cincinnati
Spokane
San Antonio
2021 NCAA regional (blue) and Final Four (red) locations as originally selected

The tournament's first two rounds were originally scheduled to be hosted by the top sixteen seeds. The following were the sites initially selected to host the later rounds of the 2021 tournament:[19][20][21]

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight) (March 26–29)

National semifinals and championship (final Four and championship) (April 2 and 4)

  • Alamodome, San Antonio (Hosts: the University of the Incarnate Word, the University of Texas at San Antonio, and San Antonio Sports)

This is the third time that the women's Final Four was played in San Antonio, having previously been played in the city in 2002 and 2010.

Qualification and selection

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Automatic qualifiers

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The following teams automatically qualified for the 2021 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament.[a]

ConferenceTeamRecordAppearanceLast bid
ACCNC State20–226th2019
America EastStony Brook15–51stNever
AmericanSouth Florida18–37th2018
ASUNFlorida Gulf Coast26–27th2019
Atlantic 10VCU16–102nd2009
Big 12Baylor25–219th2019
Big EastUConn24–132nd2019
Big SkyIdaho State22–34th2012
Big SouthHigh Point22–61stNever
Big TenMaryland24–228th2019
Big WestUC Davis13–23rd2019
ColonialDrexel14–82nd2009
C-USAMiddle Tennessee17–719th2016
HorizonWright State18–73rd2019
Ivy LeagueIvy League season canceled
MAACMarist18–311th2014
MACCentral Michigan18–86th2019
MEACNorth Carolina A&T14–25th2018
Missouri ValleyBradley17–111stNever
Mountain WestWyoming14–92nd2008
NortheastMount St. Mary's17–63rd1995
Ohio ValleyBelmont20–56th2019
Pac-12Stanford25–234th2019
PatriotLehigh10–54th2010
SECSouth Carolina22–417th2019
SouthernMercer19–63rd2019
SouthlandStephen F. Austin24–217th2006
SWACJackson State18–55th2008
Summit LeagueSouth Dakota19–53rd2019
Sun BeltTroy22–54th2017
West CoastGonzaga23–312th2019
WACUtah Valley[a]13–61stNever
  1. ^ a b California Baptist won the WAC tournament, but was ineligible for the NCAA Tournament due to its transition from Division II and instead played in the WNIT. Utah Valley received the WAC's bid by finishing in second place behind California Baptist in the regular season.

Tournament seeds

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Alamo regional – Alamodome,
San Antonio, Texas
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordNETBerth type
1StanfordPac-1225–21Automatic
2LouisvilleACC23–36At-Large
3GeorgiaSEC20–613At-Large
4ArkansasSEC19–817At-Large
5Missouri StateMissouri Valley21–220At-Large
6OregonPac-1213–810At-Large
7NorthwesternBig Ten15–831At-Large
8Oklahoma StateBig 1218–827At-Large
9Wake ForestACC12–1247At-Large
10UCFAmerican16–438At-Large
11South DakotaSummit19–532Automatic
12UC DavisBig West13–271Automatic
13Wright StateHorizon18–780Automatic
14DrexelColonial14–8106Automatic
15MaristMAAC18–3103Automatic
16Utah ValleyWAC13–6216Automatic
HemisFair regional – Alamodome,
San Antonio, Texas
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordNETBerth type
1South CarolinaSEC22–44Automatic
2MarylandBig Ten24–25Automatic
3UCLAPac-1216–58At-Large
4West VirginiaBig 1221–624At-Large
5Georgia TechACC15–830At-Large
6TexasBig 1218–929At-Large
7AlabamaSEC16–933At-Large
8Oregon StatePac-1211–736At-Large
9Florida StateACC10–848At-Large
10North CarolinaACC13–1035At-Large
11BradleyMissouri Valley17–1179Automatic
12Stephen F. AustinSouthland24–219Automatic
13LehighPatriot10–575Automatic
14WyomingMountain West14–999Automatic
15Mount St. Mary'sNortheast17–6114Automatic
16MercerSouthern19–6146Automatic
Mercado regional – Alamodome,
San Antonio, Texas
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordNETBerth type
1NC StateACC20–27Automatic
2Texas A&MSEC23–211At-Large
3ArizonaPac-1216–515At-Large
4IndianaBig Ten18–59At-Large
5GonzagaWCC23–316Automatic
6RutgersBig Ten14–412At-Large
7Iowa StateBig 1216–1026At-Large
8South FloridaAmerican18–325Automatic
9Washington StatePac-1212–1145At-Large
10Michigan StateBig Ten15–840At-Large
11BYUWCC18–550At-Large
12BelmontOhio Valley20–563Automatic
13VCUAtlantic 1016–10105Automatic
14Stony BrookAmerica East15–5100Automatic
15TroySun Belt22–5115Automatic
16North Carolina A&TMEAC14–2123Automatic
River Walk regional – Alamodome,
San Antonio, Texas
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordNETBerth type
1UConnBig East24–12Automatic
2BaylorBig 1225–23Automatic
3TennesseeSEC16–714At-Large
4KentuckySEC17–818At-Large
5IowaBig Ten18–923At-Large
6MichiganBig Ten14–522At-Large
7Virginia TechACC14–928At-Large
8SyracuseACC14–843At-Large
9South Dakota StateSummit21–346At-Large
10MarquetteBig East19–634At-Large
11Florida Gulf CoastASUN26–241Automatic
12Central MichiganMAC18–890Automatic
13Idaho StateBig Sky22–384Automatic
14Middle TennesseeC-USA17–7107Automatic
15Jackson StateSWAC18–5111Automatic
16High PointBig South22–6180Automatic

Tournament records

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  • Arizona's Aari McDonald made 22 three-pointers in the tournament, tying the record for the most ever made in an NCAA tournament, set by Kia Nurse in 2017.[22]
  • NC State's Kai Crutchfield hit 10 of 11 three point field-goal attempts, getting 90.9% of her attempts, setting the record for best three point field-goal percentage in a tournament.[23]

Bracket

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All times are listed as Central Daylight Time (UTC−5)
* – Denotes overtime period

Alamo regional – San Antonio, Texas

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First round
Round of 64
March 21–22
Second round
Round of 32
March 23–24
Regional semifinals
Sweet Sixteen
March 28
Regional final
Elite Eight
March 30
            
1Stanford87
16Utah Valley44
1Stanford73
Alamodome (March 21)
Bill Greehey Arena (March 21)
8Oklahoma State62
8Oklahoma State84
9Wake Forest61
1Stanford89
Convocation Center (March 23)
Convocation Center (March 24)
5Missouri State62
5Missouri State70
12UC Davis51
5Missouri State64
Bill Greehey Arena (March 22)
Frank Erwin Center (March 22)
13Wright State39
4Arkansas62
13Wright State66
1Stanford78
2Louisville63
6Oregon67
11South Dakota47
6Oregon57
Alamodome (March 22)
Bill Greehey Arena (March 22)
3Georgia50
3Georgia67
14Drexel53
6Oregon42
Alamodome (March 24)
Alamodome (March 24)
2Louisville60
7Northwestern62
10UCF51
7Northwestern53
Bill Greehey Arena (March 22)
Alamodome (March 22)
2Louisville62
2Louisville74
15Marist43

* – Denotes overtime period

Alamo regional final

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ESPN
March 30
8:00pm
#2 Louisville Cardinals 63, #1 Stanford Cardinal 78
Scoring by quarter: 21–13, 17–13, 12–22, 13–30
Pts: D. Evans, 24
Rebs: M. Robinson, 8
Asts: D. Evans, K. Smith, M. Robinson, 3
Pts: Le. Hull, 21
Rebs: H. Jones, 10
Asts: K. Williams, 5
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 1,463
Referees: Katie Lukanich, Michael Price, Cheryl Flores

HemisFair regional – San Antonio, Texas

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First round
Round of 64
March 21–22
Second round
Round of 32
March 23–24
Regional semifinals
Sweet Sixteen
March 28
Regional final
Elite Eight
March 30
            
1South Carolina79
16Mercer53
1South Carolina59
Alamodome (March 21)
Strahan Arena (March 21)
8Oregon State42
8Oregon State83
9Florida State59
1South Carolina76
Alamodome (March 23)
Convocation Center (March 23)
5Georgia Tech65
5Georgia Tech54*
12Stephen F. Austin52
5Georgia Tech73
Bill Greehey Arena (March 21)
Bill Greehey Arena (March 21)
4West Virginia56
4West Virginia77
13Lehigh53
1South Carolina62
6Texas34
6Texas81
11Bradley62
6Texas71
Strahan Arena (March 22)
Frank Erwin Center (March 22)
3UCLA62
3UCLA69
14Wyoming48
6Texas64
Alamodome (March 24)
Bill Greehey Arena (March 24)
2Maryland61
7Alabama80
10North Carolina71
7Alabama64
Alamodome (March 22)
Alamodome (March 22)
2Maryland100
2Maryland98
15Mount St. Mary's45

* – Denotes overtime period

HemisFair regional final

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ESPN
March 30
6:00pm
#6 Texas Longhorns 34, #1 South Carolina Gamecocks 62
Scoring by quarter: 7–18, 15–19, 12–15, 0–10
Pts: A. Warren, 13
Rebs: C. Taylor, L. Ebo, 7
Asts: J. Allen-Taylor, 3
Pts: Z. Cooke, 16
Rebs: A. Boston, B. Beal, L. Amihere, V. Saxton, 8
Asts: D. Henderson, 7
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 0
Referees: Joseph Vaszily, Infini Robinson, Pualani Spurlock

Mercado regional – San Antonio, Texas

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First round
Round of 64
March 21–22
Second round
Round of 32
March 23–24
Regional semifinals
Sweet Sixteen
March 27
Regional final
Elite Eight
March 29
            
1NC State79
16North Carolina A&T58
1NC State79
Strahan Arena (March 21)
Frank Erwin Center (March 21)
8South Florida67
8South Florida57
9Washington State53
1NC State70
Alamodome (March 23)
Bill Greehey Arena (March 24)
4Indiana73
5Gonzaga59
12Belmont64
12Belmont48
Strahan Arena (March 22)
Convocation Center (March 22)
4Indiana70
4Indiana63
13VCU32
4Indiana53
3Arizona66
6Rutgers66
11BYU69
11BYU46
Strahan Arena (March 22)
Alamodome (March 22)
3Arizona52
3Arizona79
14Stony Brook44
3Arizona74
Convocation Center (March 24)
Alamodome (March 24)
2Texas A&M59
7Iowa State79
10Michigan State75
7Iowa State82
Alamodome (March 22)
Frank Erwin Center (March 22)
2Texas A&M84*
2Texas A&M84
15Troy80

* – Denotes overtime period

Mercado regional final

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ESPN
March 29
8:00pm
#4 Indiana Hoosiers 53, #3 Arizona Wildcats 66
Scoring by quarter: 11–14, 12–13, 21–19, 9–20
Pts: M. Holmes, 20
Rebs: A. Gulbe, 9
Asts: G. Berger, 4
Pts: A. McDonald, 33
Rebs: A. McDonald, 11
Asts: A. McDonald, 4
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 0
Referees: Felicia Grinter, Tiara Cruse, Tiffany Bird

River Walk regional – San Antonio, Texas

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First round
Round of 64
March 21
Second round
Round of 32
March 23
Regional semifinals
Sweet Sixteen
March 27
Regional final
Elite Eight
March 29
            
1UConn102
16High Point59
1UConn83
Alamodome (March 21)
Frank Erwin Center (March 21)
8Syracuse47
8Syracuse72
9South Dakota State55
1UConn92
Alamodome (March 23)
Bill Greehey Arena (March 23)
5Iowa72
5Iowa87
12Central Michigan72
5Iowa86
Alamodome (March 21)
Alamodome (March 21)
4Kentucky72
4Kentucky71
13Idaho State63
1UConn69
2Baylor67
6Michigan87
11Florida Gulf Coast66
6Michigan70
Convocation Center (March 21)
Frank Erwin Center (March 21)
3Tennessee55
3Tennessee87
14Middle Tennessee62
6Michigan75
Alamodome (March 23)
Bill Greehey Arena (March 23)
2Baylor78*
7Virginia Tech70
10Marquette63
7Virginia Tech48
Strahan Arena (March 21)
Alamodome (March 21)
2Baylor90
2Baylor101
15Jackson State52

* – Denotes overtime period

River Walk regional final

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ESPN
March 29
6:00pm
#2 Baylor Lady Bears 67, #1 UConn Huskies 69
Scoring by quarter: 24–26, 15–11, 16–16, 12–16
Pts: D. Carrington, 22
Rebs: N. Smith, 13
Asts: N. Smith, M. Ursin, D. Carrington, 3
Pts: P. Bueckers, 28
Rebs: O. Nelson-Ododa, 8
Asts: O. Nelson-Ododa, 4
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 3,377
Referees: Lisa Jones, Brian Hall, Karen Preato

Final Four

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During the Final Four round, Stanford, the winner of the Alamo Regional defeated South Carolina, the winner of the HemisFair Regional. Arizona, the winner of the Mercado Regional defeated UConn, the winner of the River Walk Regional. In the championship game, Stanford defeated Arizona by a score of 54–53 to take the 2021 title.

Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas

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National semifinals
Final Four
April 2
National championship game
April 4
      
A1Stanford66
H1South Carolina65
A1Stanford54
M3Arizona53
M3Arizona69
RW1UConn59

National semifinals

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ESPN
April 2
5:00 pm
A1 Stanford Cardinal 66, H1 South Carolina Gamecocks 65
Scoring by quarter: 15–15, 16–10, 21–24, 14–16
Pts: H. Jones, 24
Rebs: Le. Hull, 13
Asts: Le. Hull, 4
Pts: Z. Cooke, 25
Rebs: A. Boston, 16
Asts: D. Henderson, 3
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 0
Referees: Eric Brewton, Brenda Pantoja, Gina Cross
ESPN
April 2
8:30 pm
M3 Arizona Wildcats 69, RW1 UConn Huskies 59
Scoring by quarter: 16–10, 16–12, 16–17, 21–20
Pts: A. McDonald, 26
Rebs: H. Pueyo, 8
Asts: B. Yeaney, 4
Pts: C. Williams, 20
Rebs: A. Edwards, 7
Asts: P. Bueckers, 4
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 4,793
Referees: Chuck Gonzalez, Dee Kantner, Pualani Spurlock-Welsh

National championship

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ESPN
April 4
5:00 pm
A1 Stanford Cardinal 54, M3 Arizona Wildcats 53
Scoring by quarter: 16–8, 15–16, 12–16, 11–13
Pts: H. Jones, 17
Rebs: Le. Hull, 10
Asts: A. Prechtel, A. Wilson, K. Williams, 3
Pts: A. McDonald, 22
Rebs: S. Thomas, S. Pellington, 7
Asts: A. McDonald, T. Baptiste, 2
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 4,604
Referees: Cheryl Flores, Maj Forsberg, Felicia Grinter

Final Four all-tournament team

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Record by conference

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ConferenceBidsRecordWin %R64R32S16E8F4CGNC
Pac-12615–5.7506532221
Big East24–2.66721111
SEC710–7.58876211
ACC89–8.5298531
Big 1259–5.6435522
Big Ten710–7.5887541
Missouri Valley22–2.500211
WCC21–2.33321
American21–2.33321
Horizon11–1.50011
Ohio Valley11–1.50011
Summit20–2.0002
MAC10–1.0001
Southland10–1.0001
C-USA10–1.0001
SWAC10–1.0001
MEAC10–1.0001
Atlantic 1010–1.0001
Mountain West10–1.0001
America East10–1.0001
Atlantic Sun10–1.0001
Big Sky10–1.0001
Big South10–1.0001
Big West10–1.0001
Colonial10–1.0001
MAAC10–1.0001
Patriot10–1.0001
Southern10–1.0001
WAC10–1.0001
Sun Belt10–1.0001
Northeast10–1.0001
  • The R64, R32, S16, E8, F4, CG, and NC columns indicate how many teams from each conference were in the round of 64 (first round), round of 32 (second round), Sweet 16, Elite Eight, Final Four, championship game, and national champion, respectively.
  • The American, America East, Atlantic 10, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, Big West, Conference USA, Colonial, Horizon, MAAC, MEAC, Mountain West, Northeast, Ohio Valley, Patriot, Southern, Southland, Sun Belt, SWAC, and WAC conferences each had one representative that was eliminated in the first round.

Media coverage

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Television

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ESPN served as broadcaster of the tournament, as part of its multi-year deal to broadcast NCAA national championships. Following a similar broadcast arrangement to the men's tournament under the CBS/Turner consortium, ESPN announced that all games in the tournament would be televised nationally in their entirety by either ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, or, for the first time, ABC (marking the first women's tournament to include coverage on broadcast television since 1995), rather than use a mix of regional broadcasts, streaming, and "whiparound" feeds.[25]

Kerry Callahan became the first woman to serve as producer for ESPN's coverage of the Women's Final Four.[26]

Studio host and analysts

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Broadcast assignments

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Radio

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Westwood One has exclusive radio rights to the entire tournament.[27][28] Teams participating in the Elite Eight, Final Four, and Championship were allowed to have their own local broadcasts, but they were not allowed to stream those broadcasts online.

Regional finals

Final Four and Championship

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "What the Ivy League's canceling its seasons means for college basketball, other sports". ESPN.com. November 13, 2020. Retrieved April 9, 2021.
  2. ^ Voepel, Mechelle (May 4, 2020). "Women's Div. I hoop switching from RPI to NET to assess teams". ESPN.com. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  3. ^ Voepel, Mechelle (February 5, 2021). "Entire NCAA women's basketball tournament to be held in San Antonio area". ESPN. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  4. ^ "San Antonio region to host 2021 Division I Women's Basketball Championship | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com. Retrieved February 23, 2021.
  5. ^ Voepel, Mechelle (February 28, 2021). "UConn, Stanford, Texas A&M, South Carolina top four in early peek at NCAA women's basketball tournament seeding". ESPN. Retrieved February 28, 2021.
  6. ^ Nixon, Rick (February 19, 2021). "NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Championship to allow limited fan attendance". NCAA.org. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "'Is that the best we can do?' Inside an overdue reckoning in NCAA basketball". ESPN.com. April 3, 2021. Retrieved April 8, 2021.
  8. ^ a b "NCAA hires firm for review after tourney issues". ESPN.com. March 25, 2021. Retrieved April 8, 2021.
  9. ^ "NCAA admits women's tourney facilities lacking". ESPN.com. March 18, 2021. Retrieved April 8, 2021.
  10. ^ Brown, PJ (March 19, 2021). "NCAA Tournament notebook: Adia Barnes 'embarrassed' by weight-room inequalities between men, women". Arizona Daily Star. Archived from the original on March 21, 2021. Retrieved April 8, 2021.
  11. ^ "Emmert vows review of NCAA facility 'blunders'". ESPN.com. March 22, 2021. Retrieved April 8, 2021.
  12. ^ a b "NCAA: March Madness branding will be used for women's tournament". sports.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on September 30, 2021. Retrieved September 30, 2021.
  13. ^ Novy-Williams, Emily Caron,Eben (April 4, 2021). "March Madness Daily: The NCAA's Undervalued Women's TV Rights". Sportico.com. Retrieved April 6, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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