1992 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 1992 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament began on March 18 and ended on April 5. The tournament featured 48 teams. The Final Four consisted of Virginia Cavaliers, Stanford Cardinal, Southwest Missouri State Lady Bears (now known as Missouri State), and Western Kentucky Lady Toppers, with Stanford defeating Western Kentucky 78–62 to win its second NCAA title.[1] Stanford's Molly Goodenbour was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.[2]

1992 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Teams48
Finals siteLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena
Los Angeles, California
ChampionsStanford Cardinal (2nd title, 2nd title game,
3rd Final Four)
Runner-upWestern Kentucky Lady Toppers (1st title game,
3rd Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachTara VanDerveer (2nd title)
MOPMolly Goodenbour (Stanford Cardinal)
NCAA Division I women's tournaments
«19911993»

Notable events

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Stanford Cardinal team with National Championship Trophy

Missouri State (then Southwest Missouri State), was not a regular participant in the Tournament. They had not earned a bid until 1991, when they won their first game and lost their second game. In 1992, they were assigned an eight seed. Their first game was against Kansas, which they won 75–59. That win matched them up against the number one seed in the Midwest region, Iowa. The Hawkeyes were 25–3, winner of the Big Ten conference in their ninth year under Hall of Fame coach C. Vivian Stringer. Despite the odds, the Southwest Missouri State team took Iowa to overtime, and won 61–60 in the overtime period. That matched up the Lady Bears against fifth-seeded UCLA, but Southwest Missouri State won easily, 83–57. Their next game was against SEC regular season champion Ole Miss, one of a small number of teams who had played in every NCAA tournament since the first one in 1982. Ole Miss was the number two seed in the region, but Southwest Missouri State again achieved an upset, winning the game 94–71. That win placed the Lady Bears in the Final Four. Prior to this win, the lowest seed to make it to the Final Four was a four seed.[3] Only one team, Arkansas in 1998, with a nine seed, has made it to the Final four with a weaker seed.[4]

Southwest Missouri State's opponent in the semi-final game was Western Kentucky, who has also achieved some upsets. After beating Alabama, the Lady Toppers faced Tennessee, the number one seed in the Mideast region, and the defending national champions. Western Kentucky won the game 75–70, and went on to beat the number 2 seed in the region, Maryland, by the identical score.[4]

The other semi-final included two of the powerhouses of the sport at the time. Both Virginia and Stanford were number one seeds. Stanford had won the National championship two years before, while Virginia was competing in their third consecutive final four, and were the runner-up in the prior year's tournament.[4]

In the game between Western Kentucky and Southwest Missouri State, the Lady Toppers dashed the upset hopes of the Lady Bears, and won the game 84–72. The game between Stanford and Virginia was much closer, with Virginia leading late but Stanford pulled to a small lead. Virginia's Dawn Staley scored to cut the lead to one with eleven seconds left. Stanford now controlled the ball, and in bounded it, but with time running out, the ball was loose on the floor. Staley dived after the loose ball, recovered it and flung it to teammate Melanee Wagener while Staley called for a timeout. The referee did not hear her call for the timeout, then heard the horn announcing the end of the game, so the refs and the teams headed off the court. Staley chased after Doug Cloud, the referee, insisting she had called a time out. A different referee, Bob Trammell, had heard her call for the timeout, so the teams were called back, and a fraction of a second were placed back on the clock. Virginia in bounded the ball and got it to Staley, but she was unable to get a final shot off. Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer would call it, "the longest seven-tenths of a second in my life". The Cardinal won a one-point game 66–65. Van Derveer would later recount the story when preparing to train the USA National team, including Staley, for the 1996 Olympics.[4][5][6]

After losing three starters from the prior year's team, including All-American Sonia Henning, some observers, including assistant coach Amy Tucker, were not expecting a stellar season. Their point guard, Molly Goodenbour, had not seen a lot of playing time in prior years playing behind Henning and Jennifer Azzi, but she would go on to hit 18 three-pointers in the tournament, at the time an NCAA record, and win the MVP award for the tournament. Teammates Rachel Hemmer and Val Whiting also earned spots on the All-Tournament team as the team won a 78–62 victory over Western Kentucky to claim their second national championship in three years.[5][7]

Records

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  • Free throws – Tonya Baucom (Southwest Missouri State) hit nine of nine free throws attempts, tied with several others for free throw accuracy at 100%, and second only behind Sheryl Swoopes for free throws made in a Final Four without a miss. This occurred in the National Semi-final against Western Kentucky.[4]

Qualifying teams – automatic

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Forty-eight teams were selected to participate in the 1992 NCAA Tournament. Twenty-two conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 1992 NCAA tournament.[4]

Automatic Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
University of Tennessee at ChattanoogaSoCon18–118–212
University of Colorado at BoulderBig Eight22–811–37
Creighton UniversityWAC27–313–17
George Washington UniversityAtlantic 1024–611–58
University of IowaBig Ten25–316–21
University of MiamiBig East29–118–02
University of MontanaBig Sky22–613–311
Northern Illinois UniversityNorth Star17–138–411
Old Dominion UniversityCAA20–109–510
Saint Peter's CollegeMAAC24–613–311
Santa Clara UniversityWest Coast20–910–412
University of Southern MississippiMetro21–99–39
Southwest Missouri State UniversityGateway27–217–18
Stanford UniversityPac-1025–315–31
Stephen F. Austin State UniversitySouthland27–217–12
University of TennesseeSEC27–210–11
Tennessee Technological UniversityOVC21–813–112
Texas Tech UniversitySouthwest26–413–14
University of ToledoMAC25–515–110
University of California, Santa BarbaraBig West26–416–29
University of VirginiaACC29–115–11
Western Kentucky UniversitySun Belt23–713–34
University of Notre DameMidwestern Collegiate14–168–412

Qualifying teams – at-large

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Twenty-six additional teams were selected to complete the forty-eight invitations.[4]

At-large Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
University of AlabamaSEC22–67–45
Arizona State UniversityPacific-1020–811–76
University of California, BerkeleyPacific-1020–812–65
Clemson UniversityACC20–99–75
University of ConnecticutBig East22–1013–56
DePaul UniversityGreat Midwest20–98–211
University of HoustonSouthwest22–710–48
University of KansasBig Eight25–512–29
California State University, Long BeachBig West21–913–510
Louisiana Tech UniversitySun Belt20–912–46
University of Maryland, College ParkACC23–513–32
University of Mississippi (Ole Miss)SEC27–211–02
University of North Carolina at Chapel HillACC21–89–77
Pennsylvania State UniversityIndependent23–6–-3
Providence CollegeBig East21–813–57
Purdue UniversityBig Ten22–614–43
Rutgers UniversityAtlantic 1020–1011–58
University of Southern CaliforniaPacific-1021–714–43
Southern Illinois University CarbondaleGateway22–715–310
University of Texas at AustinSouthwest21–911–34
University of California, Los AngelesPacific-1019–912–65
Vanderbilt UniversitySEC20–86–53
University of VermontNorth Atlantic29–014–09
West Virginia UniversityAtlantic 1025–316–04
University of Wisconsin–MadisonBig Ten20–813–56

Bids by conference

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Twenty-two conferences earned an automatic bid. In eleven cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Three conferences, the Great Midwest, the Midwestern Collegiate, and the North Atlantic conferences sent a single representative as an at-large team. One independent school was selected. Twenty-five additional at-large teams were selected from ten of the conferences.[4]

BidsConferenceTeams
5Pacific-10Stanford, Arizona State, California, USC, UCLA
4ACCVirginia, Clemson, Maryland, North Carolina
4SECTennessee, Alabama, Ole Miss, Vanderbilt
3Atlantic 10George Washington, Rutgers, West Virginia
3Big EastMiami (FL), Connecticut, Providence
3Big TenIowa, Purdue, Wisconsin
3SouthwestTexas Tech, Houston, Texas
2Big EightColorado, Kansas
2Big WestUC Santa Barbara, Long Beach State
2GatewaySW Missouri State, Southern Illinois
2Sun BeltWestern Kentucky, Louisiana Tech
1Big SkyMontana
1CAAOld Dominion
1Great MidwestDePaul
1IndependentPenn State
1MetroSouthern Miss
1Metro AtlanticSt. Peter's
1Mid-AmericanToledo
1Midwestern CollegiateNotre Dame
1North AtlanticVermont
1North StarNorthern Illinois
1OVCTennessee Tech
1SouthernChattanooga
1SouthlandStephen F. Austin
1West CoastSanta Clara
1WACCreighton

First and second rounds

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Clemson
Storrs
Washington
Chapel Hill
Providence
Tuscaloosa
Piscataway
Ruston
Boulder
DeKalb
Springfield
Los Angeles
Santa Barbara
Berkeley
Omaha
Madison
1992 NCAA first round
Nashville
Charlottesville
Morgantown
Coral Gables
West Lafayette
College Park
Bowling Green
Knoxville
Iowa City
Austin
University
University Park
Los Angeles
Stanford
Nacogdoches
Lubbock
1992 NCAA second round

In 1992, the field remained at 48 teams. The teams were seeded, and assigned to four geographic regions, with seeds 1–12 in each region. In Round 1, seeds 8 and 9 faced each other for the opportunity to face the 1 seed in the second round, seeds 7 and 10 played for the opportunity to face the 2 seed, seeds 5 and 12 played for the opportunity to face the 4 seed, and seeds 6 and 11 played for the opportunity to face the 3 seed. In the first two rounds, the higher seed was given the opportunity to host the first-round game. In most cases, the higher seed accepted the opportunity. The exceptions:[8]

  • Sixth seeded Arizona State played eleventh seeded DePaul at DePaul
  • Ninth seeded UC Santa Barbara played eighth seeded Houston at UC Santa Barbara

The following table lists the region, host school, venue and the thirty-two first and second round locations:

RegionRndHostVenueCityState
East1Clemson UniversityLittlejohn ColiseumClemsonSouth Carolina
East1University of ConnecticutHarry A. Gampel PavilionStorrsConnecticut
East1George Washington UniversityCharles E. Smith Athletic CenterWashingtonDistrict of Columbia
East1University of North Carolina at Chapel HillCarmichael AuditoriumChapel HillNorth Carolina
East2Vanderbilt UniversityMemorial GymnasiumNashvilleTennessee
East2University of VirginiaUniversity HallCharlottesvilleVirginia
East2West Virginia UniversityWVU ColiseumMorgantownWest Virginia
East2University of MiamiKnight Sports ComplexCoral GablesFlorida
Mideast1Providence CollegeAlumni HallProvidenceRhode Island
Mideast1University of AlabamaColeman ColiseumTuscaloosaAlabama
Mideast1Rutgers UniversityLouis Brown Athletic CenterPiscatawayNew Jersey
Mideast1Louisiana Tech UniversityThomas Assembly CenterRustonLouisiana
Mideast2Purdue UniversityMackey ArenaWest LafayetteIndiana
Mideast2University of Maryland, College ParkCole Field HouseCollege ParkMaryland
Mideast2Western Kentucky UniversityE.A. Diddle ArenaBowling GreenKentucky
Mideast2University of TennesseeThompson–Boling ArenaKnoxvilleTennessee
Midwest1University of Colorado at BoulderCU Events Center (Coors Events Center)BoulderColorado
Midwest1DePaul UniversityChick Evans Field HouseDeKalbIllinois
Midwest1Southwest Missouri State UniversityHammons Student CenterSpringfieldMissouri
Midwest1University of California, Los AngelesPauley PavilionLos AngelesCalifornia
Midwest2University of IowaCarver–Hawkeye ArenaIowa CityIndiana
Midwest2University of Texas at AustinFrank Erwin CenterAustinTexas
Midwest2University of Mississippi (Ole Miss)Tad Smith ColiseumOxfordMississippi
Midwest2Pennsylvania State UniversityRecreation Building (Rec Hall)University ParkPennsylvania
West1University of California, Santa BarbaraUC Santa Barbara Events CenterSanta BarbaraCalifornia
West1University of California, BerkeleyHarmon GymBerkeleyCalifornia
West1Creighton UniversityOmaha Civic AuditoriumOmahaNebraska
West1University of Wisconsin–MadisonWisconsin Field HouseMadisonWisconsin
West2University of Southern CaliforniaLos Angeles Memorial Sports ArenaLos AngelesCalifornia
West2Stanford UniversityMaples PavilionStanfordCalifornia
West2Stephen F. Austin State UniversityWilliam R. Johnson ColiseumNacogdochesTexas
West2Texas Tech UniversityLubbock Municipal ColiseumLubbockTexas

Regionals and Final Four

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Charlottesville
West Lafayette
Boulder
Seattle
Los Angeles
1992 NCAA regionals and Final Four

The regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 26 to March 28 at these sites:

Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four, held April 4 and April 5 in Los Angeles at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (co-hosts: University of Southern California, University of California, Los Angeles)[9]

Bids by state

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The forty-eight teams came from twenty-nine states, plus Washington, D.C. California had the most teams with seven bids, the first time in tournament history a state had more than four bids. Twenty-one states did not have any teams receiving bids.[4]

NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 1992
BidsStateTeams
7CaliforniaSanta Clara, Stanford, UC Santa Barbara, California, Long Beach State, USC, UCLA
4TennesseeChattanooga, Tennessee, Tennessee Tech, Vanderbilt
4TexasStephen F. Austin, Texas Tech, Houston, Texas
3IllinoisNorthern Illinois, DePaul, Southern Illinois
2IndianaNotre Dame, Purdue
2MississippiOle Miss, Southern Miss
2New JerseySt. Peter's, Rutgers
2VirginiaOld Dominion, Virginia
1AlabamaAlabama
1ArizonaArizona State
1ColoradoColorado
1ConnecticutConnecticut
1District of ColumbiaGeorge Washington
1FloridaMiami
1IowaIowa
1KansasKansas
1KentuckyWestern Kentucky
1LouisianaLouisiana Tech
1MarylandMaryland
1MissouriSW Missouri State
1MontanaMontana
1NebraskaCreighton
1North CarolinaNorth Carolina
1OhioToledo
1PennsylvaniaPenn State
1Rhode IslandProvidence
1South CarolinaClemson
1VermontVermont
1West VirginiaWest Virginia
1WisconsinWisconsin

Brackets

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First and second-round games played at higher seed except where noted.

East regional – Charlottesville, VA

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First round
March 18
Second round
March 21–22
Regional semifinals
March 26
Regional finals
March 28
            
1Virginia97
8George Washington58
8George Washington70
9Vermont69
1Virginia103
4West Virginia83
4West Virginia73
5Clemson72
5Clemson76
12Chattanooga72
1Virginia70
3Vanderbilt58
2Miami (FL)86
7North Carolina72
7North Carolina60
10Old Dominion54
2Miami (FL)67
3Vanderbilt77
3Vanderbilt75
6Connecticut47
6Connecticut83
11St. Peter's66

West regional – Seattle, WA

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First round
March 18
Second round
March 21–22
Regional semifinals
March 26
Regional finals
March 28
            
1Stanford82
9UC Santa Barbara73
8Houston69
9UC Santa Barbara80
1Stanford75
4Texas Tech63
4Texas Tech64
12Santa Clara58
5California71
12at Santa Clara73
1Stanford82
3USC62
2Stephen F. Austin75
7Creighton74
7Creighton79
10Long Beach State66
2Stephen F. Austin57
3USC61
3USC71
11Montana59
6Wisconsin74
11Montana85

Midwest regional – Boulder, CO

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First round
March 18
Second round
March 21–22
Regional semifinals
March 26
Regional finals
March 28
            
1Iowa60
8SW Missouri State61 (OT)
8SW Missouri State75
9Kansas59
8SW Missouri State83
5UCLA57
4Texas81
5UCLA82
5UCLA93
12Notre Dame72
8SW Missouri State94
2Ole Miss71
2Ole Miss72
10Southern Illinois56
7Colorado80
10Southern Illinois84 (OT)
2Ole Miss75
3Penn State72
3Penn State77
11DePaul54
6Arizona State65
11at DePaul67

Mideast regional – West Lafayette, IN

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First round
March 18
Second round
March 21–22
Regional semifinals
March 26
Regional finals
March 28
            
1Tennessee97
8Rutgers56
8Rutgers93
9Southern Miss63
1Tennessee70
4Western Kentucky75
4Western Kentucky98
5Alabama68
5Alabama100
12Tennessee Tech87
4Western Kentucky75
2Maryland70
2Maryland73
10Toledo60
7Providence64
10Toledo74
2Maryland64
3Purdue58
3Purdue98
11Northern Illinois62
6Louisiana Tech71
11Northern Illinois77 (OT)

Final Four – Los Angeles, CA

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National semifinals
April 4
National championship
April 5
      
1EVirginia65
1WStanford66
1WStanford78
4MEWestern Kentucky62
8MWSW Missouri State72
4MEWestern Kentucky84

Record by conference

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Fifteen conferences had more than one bid, or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play:[4]

Conference# of BidsRecordWin %Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Pacific-1059–4.69233211
Atlantic Coast47–4.6364221
Southeastern46–4.600432
Atlantic 1033–3.50031
Big East32–3.40021
Big Ten31–3.25021
Southwest31–3.25021
Gateway25–2.7142111
Sun Belt24–2.66711111
Big West21–2.3331
Big Eight20–2
Big Sky11–1.5001
Great Midwest11–1.5001
Independent11–1.50011
Mid-American11–1.5001
North Star11–1.5001
Southland11–1.50011
West Coast11–1.5001
Western Athletic11–1.5001

Seven conferences went 0-1: Colonial, Metro, MAAC, Midwestern Collegiate, North Atlantic Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, and Southern Conference.[4]

All-Tournament team

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Game officials

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  • Art Bomengen (semifinal)
  • Douglas Cloud (semifinal)
  • Dee Kantner (semifinal)
  • Bob Trammell (semifinal)
  • Patty Broderick (final)
  • Bill Stokes (final) [4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Gregory Cooper. "1992 NCAA National Championship Tournament". Archived from the original on October 20, 2009. Retrieved April 17, 2007.
  2. ^ "1992 Women's College Basketball NCAA Tournament". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on February 11, 2024. Retrieved March 18, 2024.
  3. ^ "Cheryl Burnett". Missouri State Bears. January 29, 2008. Retrieved September 2, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Nixon, Rick. "Official 2022 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Smith, Shelly. "Molly Rules In L.a." NCAA. Retrieved September 2, 2012.
  6. ^ VanDerveer, Tara (1997). Shooting from the outside : how a coach and her Olympic team transformed women's basketball. with Joan Ryan. New York: Avon Books. p. 16. ISBN 9780380975884.
  7. ^ Dillman, Lisa (April 6, 1992). "NCAA WOMEN'S BASKETBALL FINAL : Stanford Stands Tall : Championship: The Cardinal makes coach forget October's misery with 78-62 victory over Western Kentucky". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 2, 2012.
  8. ^ "Attendance and Sites" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  9. ^ GUSTKEY, EARL (March 31, 1995). "WOMEN'S BASKETBALL / NCAA FINAL FOUR NOTES". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 15, 2012.