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2005 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

College basketball championships in Indianapolis

2005 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

College basketball championships in Indianapolis

FieldValue
GenderWomen's
Year2005
Image2005 NCAA Women's Final Four logo.svg
ImageSize150
Caption2005 Women's Final Four logo
Teams64
FinalFourArenaRCA Dome
FinalFourCityIndianapolis, Indiana
Champions[Baylor Bears](2004-05-baylor-lady-bears-basketball-team)
TitleCount1st
ChampGameCount1st
ChampFFCount1st
RunnerUp[Michigan State Spartans](2004-05-michigan-state-spartans-women-s-basketball-team)
GameCount1st
RunnerFFCount1st
Semifinal1[LSU Tigers](2004-05-lsu-lady-tigers-basketball-team)
FinalFourCount2nd
Semifinal2[Tennessee Volunteers](2004-05-tennessee-lady-volunteers-basketball-team)
FinalFourCount216th
CoachKim Mulkey
CoachCount1st
MOPSophia Young
MOPTeamBaylor

The 2005 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament began on March 19, 2005, and concluded on April 5, 2005, when Baylor was crowned as the new national champion. The Final Four was held for the first (and last) time at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana on April 3 and 5, 2005, and was hosted by Butler University and the Horizon League. Future Final Fours will be held every five years in Indianapolis, the NCAA's home city, will be played at Lucas Oil Stadium, one block south of the Indiana Convention Center, where the RCA Dome is located. Baylor, coached by Kim Mulkey-Robertson, defeated Michigan State, coached by Joanne P. McCallie, 84–62 in the championship game. Baylor's Sophia Young was named Most Outstanding Player. For the first time, taking a page from the Men's Tournament, the regionals were named after the city they were played in, rather than the geographical location (East, Mideast, Midwest and West), and the "pod" system adopted by the Men's Tournament was used.

Notable events

In three of the four regions, the number one seed in the region advanced to the Final Four. In the Chattanooga Regional, 13th seeded Liberty upset both Penn State and DePaul to advance to the regional semifinal, but there encountered the top seed LSU, who won and went on to defeat Duke to advance to the Final Four in Indianapolis.

In the Philadelphia Regional, Tennessee faced Purdue in the second round. The victory represented the 880th win for coach Pat Summitt, moving her beyond Dean Smith 879 career victories, to claim the top spot in college basketball career victories. Rutgers upset Ohio State to advance to the regional final, but top seeded Tennessee won to advance. In the Kansas City Regional, top seeded Michigan State defeated the 2 seed Stanford to advance. The single exception was in the Tempe Regional, where second seeded Baylor upset North Carolina to earn a spot at the Final Four.

In one semifinal, Baylor faced LSU. Five years earlier, Baylor had won just seven games against twenty losses, and had never been to an NCAA Tournament. Then they hired Kim Mulkey, who coached the team to an NCAA berth in her first year, and now was coaching a team in the Final Four. However, thirteen minutes into the game, LSU led 24–9. The two teams had played before, in the opening regular season game for Baylor. In that game the Lady Bears found themselves down by 19 points at halftime. They almost closed the gap, but ended up with a one-point loss. This time, they found themselves down again by a large margin. Mulkey called a timeout, and the team responded with six straight points. Not long after, a three-pointer cut the lead to six, and they continued to chip away, reaching the halftime with the score tied at 28. After the break, LSU retook the lead, and were up by four points with just over eight minutes to play, but would go scoreless for five minutes. Baylor retook the lead, and held on to win 68–57 to advance to the championship game. Ironically, 16 years later, Kim Mulkey would depart Baylor to become the head coach at LSU.

In the second semifinal, Tennessee faced Michigan State, who were playing in their first Final Four. The Lady Vols had a six-point lead at halftime, but extended the lead to 16 points with fourteen and a half minutes to go. Although the crowd had watched Baylor recover from a 15-point deficit earlier in the evening, that had occurred with 28 minutes to play. This time, the deficit was 16 and just over 14 minutes left. The Spartans cut into the lead, and with a minute to go had tied the game. At that point Kristin Haynie, who had only scored two points in the game, stole the ball and ran almost the length of the floor to score a layup and take the lead. Tennessee then missed three shots and Michigan State scored the final points of the game to tie the record for the largest comeback in NCAA Tournament history.

The final matched up two nontraditional names in women's basketball. Michigan State had never before advanced beyond the second round, and Baylor had but once, and was only in their fourth NCAA tournament ever. Baylor opened up a 19-point lead early, but no lead seemed safe after 15 point and 16 point comebacks in the semifinals. The lead ballooned to 23, then Michigan State attempted a comeback, but the Lady Bears were too strong, and went on to win their first national championship 84–62.

Locations

So as to decrease the number of games played on a competing team's home court, the subregionals were held at eight locations, rather than 16, for the first time. Furthermore, following the lead of the men's tournament in recent years, the 2005 women's tournament used the "pod system", keeping most teams at or close to the home cities, and were held from March 19 to 22 at these locations:

  • March 19 and 21: :Bank of America Arena at Hec Edmundson Pavilion, Seattle, Washington (Host: University of Washington) :Reunion Arena, Dallas, Texas (Host: University of Texas at Austin and Texas Tech University) :Save Mart Center, Fresno, California (Host: Fresno State University) :Williams Arena, Minneapolis, Minnesota (Host: University of Minnesota, Twin Cities)

  • March 20 and 22: :Comcast Center, College Park, Maryland (Host: University of Maryland, College Park) :Dean Smith Center, Chapel Hill, North Carolina (Host: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) :Harry A. Gampel Pavilion, Storrs, Connecticut (Host: University of Connecticut) :Thompson-Boling Arena, Knoxville, Tennessee (Host: University of Tennessee)

The regionals were held from March 26 to 29 in the following regions. The regionals, for the first time, were named after the city they were played in instead of a direction (East, South, Midwest, West).

  • March 26 and 28: :Chattanooga Regional, McKenzie Arena, Chattanooga, Tennessee (Host: University of Tennessee at Chattanooga) :Tempe Regional, Wells Fargo Arena, Tempe, Arizona (Host: Arizona State University)

  • March 27 and 29: :Kansas City Regional, Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, Missouri (Host: University of Missouri–Kansas City) :Philadelphia Regional, Liacouras Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Host: Temple University)

The regional winners advanced to the Final Four, held on April 3 and 5, 2005 at the RCA Dome, in Indianapolis, Indiana, hosted by both Butler University and the Horizon League.

Tournament records

  • Margin overcome—Michigan State overcame a 16-point deficit, trailing 47–31, with 16:03 remaining, but rallied to beat Tennessee 68–64. The 16 point margin overcome is the largest in an NCAA semifinal game.

Qualifying teams - automatic

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2005 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA tournament.

Automatic BidsRecordQualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
SeasonConferenceSeed
Alcorn StateSWAC16
BaylorBig 12 Conference2
Bowling GreenMAC13
CanisiusMAAC15
ConnecticutBig East3
Coppin StateMEAC16
DartmouthIvy League14
Eastern KentuckyOhio Valley Conference12
Green BayHorizon League10
HartfordAmerica East14
Holy CrossPatriot League15
Illinois StateMissouri Valley Conference15
LibertyBig South Conference13
Michigan StateBig Ten1
Middle Tennessee StateSun Belt Conference12
MontanaBig Sky Conference12
New MexicoMountain West8
North CarolinaACC1
Old DominionColonial11
Oral RobertsMid-Continent14
RiceWAC11
Santa ClaraWest Coast Conference15
St. Francis (PA)Northeast Conference14
StanfordPac-102
StetsonAtlantic Sun Conference16
TCUConference USA7
TempleAtlantic 106
TennesseeSEC1
UT-ArlingtonSouthland13
UC-Santa BarbaraBig West Conference13
Western CarolinaSouthern Conference16

Qualifying teams - at-large

Thirty-three additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.

At-large BidsRecordQualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
SeasonConferenceSeed
ArizonaPacific-109
Arizona StatePacific-105
Boston CollegeBig East7
DePaulConference USA5
DukeAtlantic Coast2
Florida StateAtlantic Coast6
George WashingtonAtlantic 109
GeorgiaSoutheastern6
HoustonConference USA10
Iowa StateBig 127
Kansas StateBig 124
Louisiana TechWestern Athletic11
LouisvilleConference USA9
LSUSoutheastern1
MarylandAtlantic Coast7
MinnesotaBig Ten3
Ole MissSoutheastern8
N.C. StateAtlantic Coast5
Notre DameBig East4
Ohio StateBig Ten2
OklahomaBig 128
OregonPacific-1010
Penn StateBig Ten4
PurdueBig Ten9
RichmondAtlantic 1011
RutgersBig East3
USCPacific-108
TexasBig 123
Texas TechBig 124
UtahMountain West10
VanderbiltSoutheastern5
VirginiaAtlantic Coast6
Virginia TechAtlantic Coast12

Tournament seeds

SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1[LSU](2004-05-lsu-lady-tigers-basketball-team)SEC29–2At-large
2DukeACC28–4At-large
3TexasBig 1221–8At-large
4Penn StateBig Ten19–10At-large
5DePaulConference USA25–4At-large
6GeorgiaSEC22–9At-large
7Boston CollegeBig East19–9At-large
8OklahomaBig 1217–12At-large
9ArizonaPac-1019–11At-large
10HoustonConference USA21–8At-large
11RiceWAC24–8Automatic
12Virginia TechACC17–11At-large
13LibertyBig South24–6Automatic
14Oral RobertsMid-Continent22–8Automatic
15CanisiusMAAC21–9Automatic
16StetsonAtlantic Sun17–13Automatic
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1North CarolinaACC28–4Automatic
2[Baylor](2004-05-baylor-lady-bears-basketball-team)Big 1227–3Automatic
3MinnesotaBig Ten24–7At-large
4Notre DameBig East26–5At-large
5Arizona StatePac-1021–9At-large
6VirginiaACC20–10At-large
7TCUConference USA23–9Automatic
8Ole MissSEC19–10At-large
9George WashingtonAtlantic 1022–8At-large
10OregonPac-1020–9At-large
11Old DominionColonial22–8Automatic
12Eastern KentuckyOhio Valley23–8Automatic
13UC Santa BarbaraBig West21–8Automatic
14Saint FrancisNortheast21–9Automatic
15Illinois StateMissouri Valley13–17Automatic
16Coppin StateMEAC23–7Automatic

|-

SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1[Tennessee](2004-05-tennessee-lady-volunteers-basketball-team)SEC26–4Automatic
2Ohio StateBig Ten29–3At-large
3RutgersBig East25–6At-large
4Texas TechBig 1222–7At-large
5NC StateACC21–7At-large
6TempleAtlantic 1027–3Automatic
7MarylandACC21–9At-large
8New MexicoMountain West26–4Automatic
9PurdueBig Ten16–12At-large
10Green BayHorizon League27–3Automatic
11Louisiana TechWAC20–9At-large
12Middle TennesseeSun Belt23–7Automatic
13UT ArlingtonSouthland21–9Automatic
14HartfordAmerica East22–8Automatic
15Holy CrossPatriot League20–10Automatic
16Western CarolinaSouthern18–13Automatic
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1Michigan StateBig Ten28–3Automatic
2StanfordPac-1029–2Automatic
3[Connecticut](2004-05-connecticut-huskies-women-s-basketball-team)Big East23–7Automatic
4Kansas StateBig 1223–7At-large
5VanderbiltSEC22–7At-large
6Florida StateACC23–7At-large
7Iowa StateBig 1223–6At-large
8USCPac-1019–10At-large
9LouisvilleConference USA22–8At-large
10UtahMountain West25–7At-large
11RichmondAtlantic 1023–7At-large
12MontanaBig Sky22–7Automatic
13Bowling GreenMAC23–7Automatic
14DartmouthIvy League17–10Automatic
15Santa ClaraWest Coast17–13Automatic
16Alcorn StateSWAC21–8Automatic

|}

Bids by conference

Thirty-one conferences earned an automatic bid. In twenty-one cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-three additional at-large teams were selected from ten of the conferences.

1West CoastSanta Clara

Bids by state

The sixty-four teams came from thirty-one states, plus Washington, D.C. Texas had the most teams with seven bids. Nineteen states did not have any teams receiving bids.

NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2005
BidsStateTeams
7TexasBaylor, Rice, TCU, Texas-Arlington, Houston, Texas, Texas Tech
5VirginiaLiberty, Old Dominion, Richmond, Virginia, Virginia Tech
4CaliforniaSanta Clara, Stanford, UC Santa Barb., Southern California
4North CarolinaNorth Carolina, Western Caro., Duke, North Carolina State
3TennesseeMiddle Tenn., Tennessee, Vanderbilt
2ArizonaArizona, Arizona State
2ConnecticutConnecticut, Hartford
2FloridaStetson, Florida State
2IllinoisIllinois State, DePaul
2IndianaNotre Dame, Purdue
2KentuckyEastern Ky., Louisville
2LouisianaLouisiana Tech, LSU
2MarylandCoppin State, Maryland
2MassachusettsHoly Cross, Boston College
2MississippiAlcorn State, Ole Miss
2New YorkCanisius, St. Francis
2OhioBowling Green, Ohio State
2OklahomaOral Roberts, Oklahoma
2PennsylvaniaTemple, Penn State
1District of ColumbiaGeorge Washington
1GeorgiaGeorgia
1IowaIowa State
1KansasKansas State
1MichiganMichigan State
1MinnesotaMinnesota
1MontanaMontana
1New HampshireDartmouth
1New JerseyRutgers
1New MexicoNew Mexico
1OregonOregon
1UtahUtah
1WisconsinGreen Bay

Brackets

Data source

Chattanooga Regional

March 21 and 22 March 26 March 28 | RD1-team01=LSU | RD1-team02=Stetson | RD1-score01=70 | RD1-score02=36 | RD1-team03=Oklahoma | RD1-team04=Arizona | RD1-score03=69 | RD1-score04=72 | RD1-team05=DePaul | RD1-team06=Virginia Tech | RD1-score05=79 | RD1-score06=78 | RD1-team07=Penn State | RD1-team08=Liberty | RD1-score07=70 | RD1-score08=78 | RD1-team09=Georgia | RD1-team10=Rice | RD1-score09=75 | RD1-score10=49 | RD1-team11=Texas | RD1-team12=Oral Roberts | RD1-score11=63 | RD1-score12=58 | RD1-team13=Boston College | RD1-team14=Houston | RD1-score13=65 | RD1-score14=43 | RD1-team15=Duke | RD1-team16=Canisius | RD1-score15=80 | RD1-score16=48 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=LSU | RD2-seed02=9 | RD2-team02=Arizona | RD2-score01=76 | RD2-score02=43 | RD2-seed03=5 | RD2-team03=DePaul | RD2-seed04=13 | RD2-team04=Liberty | RD2-score03=79 | RD2-score04=88 | RD2-seed05=6 | RD2-team05=Georgia | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Texas | RD2-score05=70 | RD2-score06=68 | RD2-seed07=7 | RD2-team07=Boston College | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Duke | RD2-score07=65 | RD2-score08=70 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=LSU | RD3-seed02=13 | RD3-team02=Liberty | RD3-score01=90 | RD3-score02=48 | RD3-seed03=6 | RD3-team03=Georgia | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Duke | RD3-score03=57 | RD3-score04=63 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=LSU | RD4-seed02=2 | RD4-team02=Duke | RD4-score01=59 | RD4-score02=49

Tempe Regional

March 21 and 22 March 26 March 28 | RD1-team01=North Carolina | RD1-team02=Coppin State | RD1-score01=97 | RD1-score02=62 | RD1-team03=Ole Miss | RD1-team04=George Washington | RD1-score03=57 | RD1-score04=60 | RD1-team05=Arizona State | RD1-team06=Eastern Kentucky | RD1-score05=87 | RD1-score06=65 | RD1-team07=Notre Dame | RD1-team08=UC Santa Barbara | RD1-score07=61 | RD1-score08=51 | RD1-team09=Virginia | RD1-team10=Old Dominion | RD1-score09=79 | RD1-score10=57 | RD1-team11=Minnesota | RD1-team12=Saint Francis | RD1-score11=64 | RD1-score12=33 | RD1-team13=TCU | RD1-team14=Oregon | RD1-score13=55 | RD1-score14=58 | RD1-team15=Baylor | RD1-team16=Illinois State | RD1-score15=91 | RD1-score16=70 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=North Carolina | RD2-seed02=9 | RD2-team02=George Washington | RD2-score01=71 | RD2-score02=47 | RD2-seed03=5 | RD2-team03=Arizona State | RD2-seed04=4 | RD2-team04=Notre Dame | RD2-score03=70 | RD2-score04=61 | RD2-seed05=6 | RD2-team05=Virginia | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Minnesota | RD2-score05=58 | RD2-score06=73 | RD2-seed07=10 | RD2-team07=Oregon | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Baylor | RD2-score07=46 | RD2-score08=69 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=North Carolina | RD3-seed02=5 | RD3-team02=Arizona State | RD3-score01=79 | RD3-score02=72 | RD3-seed03=3 | RD3-team03=Minnesota | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Baylor | RD3-score03=57 | RD3-score04=64 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=North Carolina | RD4-seed02=2 | RD4-team02=Baylor | RD4-score01=63 | RD4-score02=72

Philadelphia Regional

March 21 and 22 March 27 March 29 | RD1-team01=Tennessee | RD1-team02=Western Carolina | RD1-score01=94 | RD1-score02=43 | RD1-team03=New Mexico | RD1-team04=Purdue | RD1-score03=56 | RD1-score04=68 | RD1-team05=NC State | RD1-team06=Middle Tennessee | RD1-score05=58 | RD1-score06=60 | RD1-team07=Texas Tech | RD1-team08=Texas-Arlington | RD1-score07=69 | RD1-score08=49 | RD1-team09=Temple | RD1-team10=Louisiana Tech | RD1-score09=66 | RD1-score10=61 | RD1-team11=Rutgers | RD1-team12=Hartford | RD1-score11=62 | RD1-score12=37 | RD1-team13=Maryland | RD1-team14=Green Bay | RD1-score13=65 | RD1-score14=55 | RD1-team15=Ohio State | RD1-team16=Holy Cross | RD1-score15=86 | RD1-score16=45 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=Tennessee | RD2-seed02=9 | RD2-team02=Purdue | RD2-score01=75 | RD2-score02=54 | RD2-seed03=12 | RD2-team03=Middle Tennessee | RD2-seed04=4 | RD2-team04=Texas Tech | RD2-score03=69 | RD2-score04=80 | RD2-seed05=6 | RD2-team05=Temple | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Rutgers | RD2-score05=54 | RD2-score06=61 | RD2-seed07=7 | RD2-team07=Maryland | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Ohio State | RD2-score07=65 | RD2-score08=75 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=Tennessee | RD3-seed02=4 | RD3-team02=Texas Tech | RD3-score01=75 | RD3-score02=59 | RD3-seed03=3 | RD3-team03=Rutgers | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Ohio State | RD3-score03=64 | RD3-score04=58 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=Tennessee | RD4-seed02=3 | RD4-team02=Rutgers | RD4-score01=59 | RD4-score02=49

Kansas City Regional

March 21 and 22 March 27 March 29 | RD1-team01=Michigan State | RD1-team02=Alcorn State | RD1-score01=73 | RD1-score02=41 | RD1-team03=USC | RD1-team04=Louisville | RD1-score03=65 | RD1-score04=49 | RD1-team05=Vanderbilt | RD1-team06=Montana | RD1-score05=67 | RD1-score06=44 | RD1-team07=Kansas State | RD1-team08=Bowling Green | RD1-score07=70 | RD1-score08=60 | RD1-team09=Florida State | RD1-team10=Richmond | RD1-score09=87 | RD1-score10=54 | RD1-team11=Connecticut | RD1-team12=Dartmouth | RD1-score11=95 | RD1-score12=47 | RD1-team13=Iowa State | RD1-team14=Utah | RD1-score13=61 | RD1-score14=73 | RD1-team15=Stanford | RD1-team16=Santa Clara | RD1-score15=94 | RD1-score16=57 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=Michigan State | RD2-seed02=8 | RD2-team02=USC | RD2-score01=61 | RD2-score02=59 | RD2-seed03=5 | RD2-team03=Vanderbilt | RD2-seed04=4 | RD2-team04=Kansas State | RD2-score03=63 | RD2-score04=60 | RD2-seed05=6 | RD2-team05=Florida State | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Connecticut | RD2-score05=52 | RD2-score06=70 | RD2-seed07=10 | RD2-team07=Utah | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Stanford | RD2-score07=62 | RD2-score08=88 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=Michigan State | RD3-seed02=5 | RD3-team02=Vanderbilt | RD3-score01=76 | RD3-score02=64 | RD3-seed03=3 | RD3-team03=Connecticut | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Stanford | RD3-score03=59 | RD3-score04=76 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=Michigan State | RD4-seed02=2 | RD4-team02=Stanford | RD4-score01=76 | RD4-score02=69

Final Four - Indianapolis, Indiana

April 5 | RD1-seed1=ME1 | RD1-team1=LSU | RD1-score1=57 | RD1-seed2=W2 | RD1-team2=Baylor | RD1-score2=68 | RD1-seed3=E1 | RD1-team3=Tennessee | RD1-score3=64 | RD1-seed4=MW1 | RD1-team4=Michigan State | RD1-score4=68 | RD2-seed1=W2 | RD2-team1=Baylor | RD2-score1=84 | RD2-seed2=MW1 | RD2-team2=Michigan State | RD2-score2=62

Record by conference

Conference# of BidsRecordWin %Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourChampionship Game
SEC512–570.6%4220
Big 12610–566.7%2111
Big Ten510–566.7%3111
Big South Conference12–166.7%1000
Big East47–463.6%2100
Pac-1058–561.5%2100
ACC79–756.3%2200
Sun Belt Conference11-150.0%0000
Atlantic 1032–340.0%0000
Mountain West21–233.3%0000
Conference USA41–420.0%0000
WAC20–20.0%0000

Nineteen conferences went 0-1: America East, Atlantic Sun Conference Big Sky Conference, Big West Conference, Colonial, Horizon League, Ivy League, MAAC, MAC, Summit League, MEAC, Missouri Valley Conference, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southern Conference, Southland, SWAC, and West Coast Conference

All-Tournament Team

  • Sophia Young, Baylor
  • Steffanie Blackmon, Baylor
  • Emily Niemann, Baylor
  • Lindsay Bowen, Michigan St.
  • Kristin Haynie, Michigan St.

Game Officials

  • Dee Kantner (semifinal)
  • Sally Bell (semifinal)
  • Tina Napier (semifinal)
  • Barb Smith (semifinal)
  • Bob Trammel (semifinal)
  • Michael Price (semifinal)
  • Lisa Mattingly (final)
  • Melissa Barlow (final)
  • Scott Yarbrough (final)

Notes

References

  1. (March 23, 2005). "Tennessee's Summitt Wins Her 880th Game". Los Angeles Times.
  2. Powell, Camille. (April 4, 2005). "Baylor Rallies to Topple LSU". The Washington Post.
  3. Greenberg, Mel. (April 4, 2005). "Michigan State ousts Tennessee The Spartans rallied for a date with Baylor in the NCAA women's final.". Philly.com.
  4. Terry, Mike. (April 4, 2005). "Michigan State Ousts Tennessee". Los Angeles Times.
  5. LONGMAN, JERE. (April 6, 2005). "Baylor Completes Remarkable Climb to Top". The New York Times.
  6. (February 2012). "Official 2012 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book". NCAA.
  7. Nixon, Rick. "Official 2022 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book". NCAA.
  8. "2005 DIVISION I WOMEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP HANDBOOK". NCAA.
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