Top-ranked teams Since the women's tournament began in 1982, 20 teams have entered the tournament ranked #1 in at least 1 poll and gone on to win the tournament: • 1982: Louisiana Tech • 1983: USC • 1986: Texas • 1989: Tennessee • 1995: UConn • 1998: Tennessee • 1999: Purdue • 2000: UConn • 2002: UConn • 2003: UConn • 2009: UConn • 2010: UConn • 2012: Baylor • 2014: UConn • 2015: UConn • 2016: UConn • 2019: Baylor • 2021: Stanford • 2022: South Carolina • 2024: South Carolina
Champions excluded the next year Only once has the reigning champion (the previous year's winner) not made it to the tournament the next year. •
1985 champion Old Dominion went 15–13 in 1986.
No. 1 seeds Since 1982, at least one #1 seed has made the Final Four every year. Under coach Geno Auriemma, Connecticut has been seeded #1 a record 23 times. Tennessee is second with 21 #1 seeds. All four #1 seeds have made it to the Final Four 5 times (champion in bold): •
1989 Auburn, Louisiana Tech, Maryland,
Tennessee •
2012 Baylor, UConn, Notre Dame, Stanford •
2015 UConn, Maryland, Notre Dame, South Carolina •
2018 UConn, Mississippi State,
Notre Dame, Louisville •
2026 UConn,
UCLA, South Carolina, Texas The championship game has matched two #1 seeds 16 times: •
1983 USC beat Louisiana Tech •
1986 Texas beat USC •
1989 Tennessee beat Auburn •
1991 Tennessee beat Virginia •
1995 UConn beat Tennessee •
2000 UConn beat Tennessee •
2002 UConn beat Oklahoma •
2003 UConn beat Tennessee •
2010 UConn beat Stanford •
2012 Baylor beat Notre Dame •
2014 UConn beat Notre Dame •
2015 UConn beat Notre Dame •
2018 Notre Dame beat Mississippi State •
2019 Baylor beat Notre Dame •
2024 South Carolina beat Iowa •
2026 UCLA beat South Carolina Four teams have beaten three #1 seeds during the course of a tournament (the largest number of such teams that can be faced) (all three teams won the national championship as beating a 3rd #1 seed in a single tournament can only happen in the finals): •
1987 Tennessee (beat Auburn, Long Beach State, Louisiana Tech) •
1988 Louisiana Tech (beat Auburn, Tennessee, Texas) •
2005 Baylor (beat LSU, Michigan State, North Carolina) •
2025 UConn (beat USC, UCLA, South Carolina) Prior to the expansion of the tournament to 64 teams, all four #1 seeds advanced to the Sweet Sixteen with three exceptions. Notably, the first two times this occurred were at the hands of the same school: •
1986 East #1 seed Virginia lost to #8 seed James Madison •
1991 East #1 seed Penn State lost to #8 seed James Madison •
1992 Midwest #1 seed Iowa lost to #8 seed Southwest Missouri State
High seeds •
1999 was the first time in tournament history (since the expansion to 64 teams) that all top seeds (1, 2, 3, and 4 seeds) made it to the Sweet Sixteen.
Low seeds Teams entering the tournament unbeaten Of the 21 teams who have entered the tournament unbeaten, 10 went on to win the National Championship. As, by definition, a team would have to win its conference tournament, and thus secure an automatic bid to the tournament, to be undefeated in a season, the only way a team could finish undefeated and not reach the tournament is if the team is banned from postseason play. (Other possibilities are that the team is independent, or is from a conference not yet eligible for an automatic bid.) Postseason bans can come about for one of two reasons: • The team is serving a postseason ban due to NCAA sanctions. • The team is transitioning from a lower NCAA division, during which time it is barred by NCAA rule from participation in NCAA-sponsored postseason play. This is the case for California Baptist, which began a transition from Division II in 2018 and thus could not play in the NCAA tournament until 2023. California Baptist was eligible for the
WNIT because that tournament is not operated by the NCAA, unlike the
men's version (or the
Women's Basketball Invitation Tournament introduced in 2024); the Lancers lost in the quarterfinals to eventual champion
Rice.
Home state Only one team has ever played the Final Four on its home court. Two other teams have played the Final Four in their home cities, and seven others have played the Final Four in their home states. The only team to play on its home court was Texas in 1987, which lost its semifinal game at the now-defunct
Frank Erwin Special Events Center. Old Dominion enjoyed nearly as large an advantage in 1983 when the Final Four was played at the
Norfolk Scope in its home city of
Norfolk, Virginia, but also lost its semifinal. The Scope has never been the Monarchs' regular home court. ODU has always used on-campus arenas, first the
ODU Fieldhouse and since 2002
Chartway Arena. The following year, USC won the national title at
Pauley Pavilion, the home court of its
Los Angeles archrival UCLA. Of the other teams to play in their home states, Stanford (1992) won the national title; Notre Dame (2011) lost in the championship game; and Western Kentucky (1986), Penn State (2000), Missouri State (2001), LSU (2004), and Baylor (2010) lost in the semifinals.
Championship margins • Overtime games in a championship game: • Tennessee 70, Virginia 67/OT (1991) • Maryland 78, Duke 75/OT (2006) • Smallest margin of victory in a championship game: 1 point • North Carolina 60, Louisiana Tech 59 (1994) • Baylor 82, Notre Dame 81 (2019) • Stanford 54, Arizona 53 (2021) • Biggest margin of victory in a championship game: 33 points • UConn 93, Louisville 60 (2013) • Margin of 10 points: Louisiana Tech (1982), Tennessee (1987 & 1989), Purdue (1999), UConn (2000, 2002, 2009, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 & 2025), and Baylor (2012) are teams to win every game in the tournament by 10 points or more on their way to a championship. The 2016 UConn team won every game by more than 20 points. • Top 10 largest point differentials accumulated over the entire tournament by tournament champion. Notably, Louisiana Tech's differential is prior to the expansion of 64 teams and the addition of one more round of play. • 2016 UConn (+239) • 2010 UConn (+214) • 2013 UConn (+208) • 2015 UConn (+197) • 2025 UConn (+197) • 2000 UConn (+187) • 2002 UConn (+161) • 2019 Baylor (+159) • 1982 Louisiana Tech (+158) • 2014 UConn (+156)
Same-conference championship games 7 championship games have featured two teams from the same conference (winner listed first and bolded): • 1989
SEC,
Tennessee and Auburn • 1996
SEC,
Tennessee and Georgia • 2006
ACC,
Maryland and Duke • 2009
Big East,
UConn and Louisville • 2013
Big East,
UConn and Louisville • 2017
SEC,
South Carolina and Mississippi State • 2021
Pac-12,
Stanford and Arizona ==Television coverage and revenues==