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2006 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

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2006 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

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FieldValue
GenderWomen's
Year2006
Image2006 NCAA Women's Final Four logo.svg
ImageSize125px
Caption2006 Women's Final Four logo
Teams64
FinalFourArenaTD Banknorth Garden
FinalFourCityBoston, Massachusetts
Champions[Maryland Terrapins](2005-06-maryland-terrapins-women-s-basketball-team)
TitleCount1st
ChampGameCount1st
ChampFFCount3rd
RunnerUp[Duke Blue Devils](2005-06-duke-blue-devils-women-s-basketball-team)
GameCount2nd
RunnerFFCount4th
Semifinal1[North Carolina Tar Heels](2005-06-north-carolina-tar-heels-women-s-basketball-team)
FinalFourCount2nd
Semifinal2[LSU Tigers](2005-06-lsu-lady-tigers-basketball-team)
FinalFourCount23rd
CoachBrenda Frese
CoachCount1st
MOPLaura Harper
MOPTeamMaryland

||TitleCount=1st

The 2006 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament was held from March 18 to April 4, 2006, at several sites, with the championship game held in Boston. The Maryland Terrapins, coached by Brenda Frese, won their first National Championship, beating the Duke Blue Devils, coached by Gail Goestenkors, 78–75 in overtime. Laura Harper of the Terrapins was named Most Outstanding Player.

The field is set at 64 teams, with 31 automatic bids and 33 at-large bids. Unlike the men's game, there is no play-in game. In addition, the first two rounds and regionals are usually played on "neutral" sites.

As of the 2023 tournament, this is the last Final Four where all four teams were coached by women.

Until the 2023 tournament, this was the last Women's final four not to include either Connecticut or Tennessee.

Notable events

In the Albuquerque Regional, Boston College upset the number one seed, Ohio State, in the second round. BC went on to play fifth seeded Utah in the regional semifinal, but Utah won by three points. Utah then played Maryland in the Regional final. With under eight seconds to go in regulation, Utah was trailing by a single point, with Shona Thorburn at the free throw line for two shots. She only made one, and the game went into overtime. This was familiar territory for the Terrapins, who were now playing in the fifth overtime game of their season. They had won the previous four, and would outscore Utah 12–2 to advance to the Final Four.

In the Bridgeport Regional, Connecticut won their first two games easily, then faced Georgia in their home state. The Huskies started out poorly, going without a single point for a stretch of over six minutes and were down 25–10 with under seven minutes to go in the first half. Then UConn scored 22 of the next 23 points to take a six-point lead. Georgia did not quit, and with seconds left, had a one-point lead. UConn had the ball and set up a last-ditch play. The play broke down, but Barbara Turner, not known as a three-point shooter, hit a three-pointer to put Connecticut up by two points with under two seconds to play. Georgia took a desperation, length of the court shot which bounced off the rim, and Connecticut held on to advance to the regional final. UConn head coach Geno Auriemma was quoted as saying, "I told the guys in the locker room, there are times that if you are lucky, fate taps you on the shoulder and you are ready. And today, we were ready".

In the regional final, top seeded Duke faced second seed UConn. With Connecticut down by two points late in the game, the Huskies Mel Thomas hit a two pint jumper to tie the game at 55 points apiece. Duke had 20 seconds left to hit a shot to take the lead. They called a timeout to set up a play but it broke down, and they called a timeout with three seconds left. The inbound pass ended up near half court, where an attempted buzzer beater bounced off the backboard, and the game went into overtime. The Blue Devils pulled out to a five-point lead with under three minutes to go, but did not score another point. UConn had the ball for a final play, down by two points, but Charde Houston missed an open jumper, and Duke won the right to go to the Final Four in Boston.

The Cleveland Regional got off to a newsworthy start during Tennessee's opening round game against Army, when the Lady Vols' Candace Parker because first woman to dunk in an NCAA tournament game and the first woman to dunk twice in a college game. Ultimately though, the top four seeds advance to the regional semifinals, the top two to the final, and top seed North Carolina beat Tennessee to advance to the Final Four. It was their first trip to the Final Four for the Tarheels since 1994, when they had won the National Championship.

The San Antonio Regional also largely followed the seeding, although third-seeded Stanford upset Oklahoma to reach the regional final. Although top seeded LSU was down by five points at halftime, they came back to beat Stanford by three points to earn a trip to the Final Four. LSU had only a one-point lead, when Candice Wiggins drove to the basket but Seimone Augustus stood in the way and took a charge. Wiggins had passed the ball to Krista Rappahahn who hit a three-pointer, but it was waved off because of the charge.

LSU was one of just seven schools to place both their men's and women's basketball teams in the Final Four in the same year. But one night after the men lost by double digits to UCLA, the women lost as well. Duke had a double-digit lead at halftime, which LSU cut to six points, but Duke then went on an 11–1 run to build the lead back up. Duke won the game 64–55 to head to the championship game.

North Carolina entered the other semifinal against Maryland with only a single loss on the season, but that loss was to Maryland. The first half was close, with Maryland holding just a two-point lead at the half. The Terrapins extended the lead in the second half to double digits, but North Carolina came back to cut the lead to three points with just over a minute left in the game. They would get no closer, and Maryland held on to win 81–70 to advance to the final game.

The semifinal wins set up an all-ACC championship game, between the two highest scoring teams in Division I. Duke had won 14 of the last 15 meetings between the two teams, but the sole win by Maryland in the streak was the most recent—the ACC semifinal match up. This game started as if it were a return to the usual results, with Duke reaching a double-digit lead at halftime, and extending to a 13-point lead in the second half. Maryland fought back, and with seconds to go in the game Kristi Toliver hit a three-pointer to tie the game. The game went into overtime, the sixth time this season Maryland had been in an overtime game. The Terrapins had won all five prior overtimes games, and this would be no different. Although down in overtime, Toliver hit two free throws to put her team back in front, and Maryland held on to win their first National Championship.

Locations

The tournament once again used the pod system, meaning that teams were more likely to play closer to home earlier in the tournament. The sites for the first two rounds were as follows:

  • March 18 and 20: :Allstate Arena, Rosemont, Illinois (Host: DePaul University) :Pepsi Center, Denver, Colorado (Host: University of Colorado at Boulder and Big 12 Conference) :McKale Center, Tucson, Arizona (Host: University of Arizona) :Memorial Gymnasium, Nashville, Tennessee (Host: Vanderbilt University)

  • March 19 and 21: :Ted Constant Convocation Center, Norfolk, Virginia (Host: Old Dominion University) :Sovereign Bank Arena, Trenton, New Jersey (Host: Rider University and Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference) :Bryce Jordan Center, State College, Pennsylvania (Host: Pennsylvania State University) :Mackey Arena, West Lafayette, Indiana (Host: Purdue University)

The Regional sites for this year (named after the city, a practice that is in use for the second consecutive year) were:

  • March 25 and 27 :Albuquerque Regional: The Pit, Albuquerque, New Mexico (Host: University of New Mexico) :San Antonio Regional: AT&T Center, San Antonio, Texas (Host: University of Texas at San Antonio)
  • March 26 and 28 :Bridgeport Regional: Bridgeport Arena at Harbor Yard, Bridgeport, Connecticut (Host: Fairfield University) :Cleveland Regional: Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland, Ohio (Host: Cleveland State University and the Mid-American Conference)

The winners of the regionals advanced to the Final Four, held at TD Banknorth Garden, Boston, Massachusetts on April 2–4, 2006, hosted by Harvard University and Northeastern University.

Tournament records

  • Free throws—Erlana Larkins, North Carolina attempted 15 free throws in the national semifinal game against Maryland, tied for the most number of free throws attempted in an NCAA semifinal game.
  • Rebounds—Khara Smith, DePaul, recorded 47 rebounds in three games. The 15.7 rebounds per game is the most ever occurring in an NCAA Tournament.
  • Rebounds—Duke recorded 292 rebounds, the most ever recorded by a single team in an NCAA Tournament. South Carolina set a new record in 2022 with 294 rebounds.

Qualifying teams - automatic

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2006 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2006 NCAA tournament.

Automatic BidsRecordQualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
SeasonConferenceSeed
ArmyPatriot League15
Bowling GreenMAC12
ChattanoogaSouthern Conference12
Coppin StateMEAC15
DartmouthIvy League14
FAUAtlantic Sun Conference16
HartfordAmerica East11
LibertyBig South Conference13
Louisiana TechWAC11
MaristMAAC14
Middle Tennessee StateSun Belt Conference12
MilwaukeeHorizon League13
Missouri StateMissouri Valley Conference13
North CarolinaACC1
Northern ArizonaBig Sky Conference14
OaklandMid-Continent16
Ohio StateBig Ten1
OklahomaBig 122
Old DominionColonial10
PepperdineWest Coast Conference15
RutgersBig East3
Sacred HeartNortheast Conference15
Southeast Missouri StateOhio Valley Conference14
SouthernSWAC16
StanfordPac-103
Stephen F. AustinSouthland13
TempleAtlantic 106
TennesseeSEC2
TulsaConference USA12
UC-RiversideBig West Conference16
UtahMountain West5

Qualifying teams - at-large

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

At-large BidsRecordQualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
SeasonConferenceSeed
Arizona StatePacific-104
BaylorBig 123
Boston CollegeAtlantic Coast8
BYUMountain West7
UC-BerkeleyPacific-1010
ConnecticutBig East2
DePaulBig East4
DukeAtlantic Coast1
FloridaSoutheastern6
Florida StateAtlantic Coast6
George WashingtonAtlantic 107
GeorgiaSoutheastern3
IowaBig Ten10
KentuckySoutheastern5
LouisvilleBig East9
LSUSoutheastern1
MarylandAtlantic Coast2
Michigan StateBig Ten4
MinnesotaBig Ten8
MissouriBig 1210
New MexicoMountain West11
N.C. StateAtlantic Coast5
Notre DameBig East9
PurdueBig Ten4
USFBig East9
USCPacific-108
St. John'sBig East7
TCUMountain West11
Texas A&MBig 126
UCLAPacific-105
VanderbiltSoutheastern8
Virginia TechAtlantic Coast7
WashingtonPacific-109

Tournament seeds

SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1[North Carolina](2005-06-north-carolina-tar-heels-women-s-basketball-team)ACC29-1Automatic
2TennesseeSEC28-4Automatic
3RutgersBig East25-4Automatic
4PurdueBig Ten24-6At-large
5UCLAPac-1020-10At-large
6Texas A&MBig 1223-8At-large
7George WashingtonAtlantic 1022-8At-large
8VanderbiltSEC20-10At-large
9LouisvilleBig East19-9At-large
10Old DominionCAA22-8Automatic
11TCUMountain West18-11At-large
12Bowling GreenMAC28-2Automatic
13Missouri StateMissouri Valley17-14Automatic
14DartmouthIvy23-6Automatic
15ArmyPatriot20-10Automatic
16UC RiversideBig West16-14Automatic
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1Ohio StateBig Ten28-2Automatic
2[Maryland](2005-06-maryland-terrapins-women-s-basketball-team)ACC28-4At-large
3BaylorBig 1224-6At-large
4Arizona StatePac-1024-6At-large
5UtahMountain West24-6Automatic
6FloridaSEC21-8At-large
7St. John'sBig East21-7At-large
8Boston CollegeACC19-11At-large
9Notre DameBig East18-11At-large
10CaliforniaPac-1018-11At-large
11New MexicoMountain West21-9At-large
12Middle TennesseeSun Belt20-10Automatic
13Stephen F. AustinSouthland23-7Automatic
14Northern ArizonaBig Sky22-10Automatic
15Sacred HeartNortheast26-4Automatic
16OaklandMid-Continent15-15Automatic

|-

SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1[Duke](2005-06-duke-blue-devils-women-s-basketball-team)ACC26-3At-large
2[Connecticut](2005-06-connecticut-huskies-women-s-basketball-team)Big East29-4At-large
3GeorgiaSEC21-8At-large
4Michigan StateBig Ten22-9At-large
5KentuckySEC21-8At-large
6TempleAtlantic 1024-7Automatic
7Virginia TechACC20-9At-large
8USCPac-1018-11At-large
9South FloridaBig East18-11At-large
10MissouriBig 1221-9At-large
11HartfordAmerica East27-3Automatic
12ChattanoogaSouthern27-3Automatic
13MilwaukeeHorizon21-8Automatic
14MaristMAAC23-6Automatic
15Coppin StateMEAC22-8Automatic
16SouthernSWAC20-10Automatic
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1[LSU](2005-06-lsu-lady-tigers-basketball-team)SEC27-3At-Large
2OklahomaBig 1229-4Automatic
3StanfordPac-1023-7Automatic
4DePaulBig East25-6At-large
5NC StateACC19-11At-large
6Florida StateACC19-9At-large
7BYUMountain West25-5At-large
8MinnesotaBig 1019-9At-large
9WashingtonPac-1018-10At-large
10[Iowa](2005-06-iowa-hawkeyes-women-s-basketball-team)Big 1017-11At-large
11Louisiana TechWAC26-4Automatic
12TulsaConference USA25-5Automatic
13LibertyBig South24-5Automatic
14SE Missouri State (vacated)Ohio Valley20-8Automatic
15PepperdineWest Coast14-16Automatic
16Florida AtlanticAtlantic Sun20-10Automatic

|}

Bids by conference

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

1Western AthleticLouisiana Tech

Bids by state

The sixty-four teams came from twenty-nine states, plus Washington, D.C. California had the most teams with six bids. Twenty-one states did not have any teams receiving bids.

NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2006
BidsStateTeams
6CaliforniaPepperdine, Stanford, UC Riverside, California, Southern California, UCLA
4FloridaFla. Atlantic, Florida, Florida St., South Fla.
4TennesseeChattanooga, Middle Tenn., Tennessee, Vanderbilt
4TexasStephen F. Austin, Baylor, TCU, Texas A&M
3ConnecticutHartford, Sacred Heart, Connecticut
3LouisianaLouisiana Tech, LSU, Southern U.
3MissouriMissouri St., Missouri, Southeast Mo. St.
3New YorkArmy, Marist, St. John's NY
3North CarolinaNorth Carolina, Duke, North Carolina St.
3VirginiaLiberty, Old Dominion, Virginia Tech
2ArizonaNorthern Ariz., Arizona St.
2IndianaNotre Dame, Purdue
2KentuckyKentucky, Louisville
2MarylandCoppin St., Maryland
2MichiganOakland, Michigan St.
2OhioBowling Green, Ohio St.
2OklahomaOklahoma, Tulsa
2UtahUtah, BYU
1District of ColumbiaGeorge Washington
1GeorgiaGeorgia
1IllinoisDePaul
1IowaIowa
1MassachusettsBoston College
1MinnesotaMinnesota
1New HampshireDartmouth
1New JerseyRutgers
1New MexicoNew Mexico
1PennsylvaniaTemple
1WashingtonWashington
1WisconsinMilwaukee

Brackets

Data source

*-Overtime game.

Cleveland Regional

March 20 and 21 March 26 March 28 | RD1-team01=North Carolina | RD1-team02=UC Riverside | RD1-score01=75 | RD1-score02=51 | RD1-team03=Vanderbilt | RD1-team04=Louisville | RD1-score03=76 | RD1-score04=64 | RD1-team05=UCLA | RD1-team06=Bowling Green | RD1-score05=74 | RD1-score06=61 | RD1-team07=Purdue | RD1-team08=Missouri State | RD1-score07=73 | RD1-score08=54 | RD1-team09=Texas A&M | RD1-team10=TCU | RD1-score09=65 | RD1-score10=69 | RD1-team11=Rutgers | RD1-team12=Dartmouth | RD1-score11=63 | RD1-score12=58 | RD1-team13=George Washington | RD1-team14=Old Dominion | RD1-score13=87 | RD1-score14=72 | RD1-team15=Tennessee | RD1-team16=Army | RD1-score15=102 | RD1-score16=54 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=North Carolina | RD2-seed02=8 | RD2-team02=Vanderbilt | RD2-score01=89 | RD2-score02=70 | RD2-seed03=5 | RD2-team03=UCLA | RD2-seed04=4 | RD2-team04=Purdue | RD2-score03=54 | RD2-score04=61 | RD2-seed05=11 | RD2-team05=TCU | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Rutgers | RD2-score05=48 | RD2-score06=82 | RD2-seed07=7 | RD2-team07=George Washington | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Tennessee | RD2-score07=53 | RD2-score08=66 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=North Carolina | RD3-seed02=4 | RD3-team02=Purdue | RD3-score01=70 | RD3-score02=68 | RD3-seed03=3 | RD3-team03=Rutgers | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Tennessee | RD3-score03=69 | RD3-score04=76 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=North Carolina | RD4-seed02=2 | RD4-team02=Tennessee | RD4-score01=75 | RD4-score02=63

Albuquerque Regional

March 20 and 21 March 25 March 27 | RD1-team01=Ohio State | RD1-team02=Oakland (MI) | RD1-score01=68 | RD1-score02=45 | RD1-team03=Boston College | RD1-team04=Notre Dame | RD1-score03=78 | RD1-score04=61 | RD1-team05=Utah | RD1-team06=Middle Tennessee | RD1-score05=76 | RD1-score06=71 | RD1-team07=Arizona State | RD1-team08=Stephen F. Austin | RD1-score07=80 | RD1-score08=61 | RD1-team09=Florida | RD1-team10=New Mexico | RD1-score09=59 | RD1-score10=83 | RD1-team11=Baylor | RD1-team12=Northern Arizona | RD1-score11=74 | RD1-score12=56 | RD1-team13=St. John's | RD1-team14=California | RD1-score13=78 | RD1-score14=68 | RD1-team15=Maryland | RD1-team16=Sacred Heart | RD1-score15=95 | RD1-score16=54 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=Ohio State | RD2-seed02=8 | RD2-team02=Boston College | RD2-score01=69 | RD2-score02=79 | RD2-seed03=5 | RD2-team03=Utah | RD2-seed04=4 | RD2-team04=Arizona State | RD2-score03=86 | RD2-score04=65 | RD2-seed05=11 | RD2-team05=New Mexico | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Baylor | RD2-score05=67 | RD2-score06=87 | RD2-seed07=7 | RD2-team07=St. John's | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Maryland | RD2-score07=74 | RD2-score08=81 | RD3-seed01=8 | RD3-team01=Boston College | RD3-seed02=5 | RD3-team02=Utah | RD3-score01=54 | RD3-score02=57 | RD3-seed03=3 | RD3-team03=Baylor | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Maryland | RD3-score03=63 | RD3-score04=82 | RD4-seed01=5 | RD4-team01=Utah | RD4-seed02=2 | RD4-team02=Maryland | RD4-score01=65 | RD4-score02=75*

Bridgeport Regional

March 20 and 21 March 26 March 28 | RD1-team01=Duke | RD1-team02=Southern | RD1-score01=96 | RD1-score02=27 | RD1-team03=USC | RD1-team04=South Florida | RD1-score03=67 | RD1-score04=65 | RD1-team05=Kentucky | RD1-team06=Chattanooga | RD1-score05=69 | RD1-score06=59 | RD1-team07=Michigan State | RD1-team08=Milwaukee | RD1-score07=65 | RD1-score08=46 | RD1-team09=Temple | RD1-team10=Hartford | RD1-score09=58 | RD1-score10=64 | RD1-team11=Georgia | RD1-team12=Marist | RD1-score11=75 | RD1-score12=60 | RD1-team13=Virginia Tech | RD1-team14=Missouri | RD1-score13=82 | RD1-score14=51 | RD1-team15=Connecticut | RD1-team16=Coppin State | RD1-score15=77 | RD1-score16=54 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=Duke | RD2-seed02=8 | RD2-team02=USC | RD2-score01=85 | RD2-score02=51 | RD2-seed03=5 | RD2-team03=Kentucky | RD2-seed04=4 | RD2-team04=Michigan State | RD2-score03=63 | RD2-score04=67 | RD2-seed05=11 | RD2-team05=Hartford | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Georgia | RD2-score05=54 | RD2-score06=73 | RD2-seed07=7 | RD2-team07=Virginia Tech | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Connecticut | RD2-score07=56 | RD2-score08=79 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=Duke | RD3-seed02=4 | RD3-team02=Michigan State | RD3-score01=86 | RD3-score02=61 | RD3-seed03=3 | RD3-team03=Georgia | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Connecticut | RD3-score03=75 | RD3-score04=77 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=Duke | RD4-seed02=2 | RD4-team02=Connecticut | RD4-score01=63* | RD4-score02=61

San Antonio Regional

March 20 March 25 March 27 | RD1-team01=LSU | RD1-team02=Florida Atlantic | RD1-score01=72 | RD1-score02=48 | RD1-team03=Minnesota | RD1-team04=Washington | RD1-score03=69 | RD1-score04=73 | RD1-team05=NC State | RD1-team06=Tulsa | RD1-score05=61 | RD1-score06=71 | RD1-team07=DePaul | RD1-team08=Liberty | RD1-score07=68 | RD1-score08=43 | RD1-team09=Florida State | RD1-team10=Louisiana Tech | RD1-score09=80 | RD1-score10=71 | RD1-team11=Stanford | RD1-team12=SE Missouri State | RD1-score11=72 | RD1-score12=45 | RD1-team13=BYU | RD1-team14=Iowa | RD1-score13=67 | RD1-score14=62 | RD1-team15=Oklahoma | RD1-team16=Pepperdine | RD1-score15=78 | RD1-score16=66 | RD2-seed01=1 | RD2-team01=LSU | RD2-seed02=9 | RD2-team02=Washington | RD2-score01=72 | RD2-score02=49 | RD2-seed03=12 | RD2-team03=Tulsa | RD2-seed04=4 | RD2-team04=DePaul | RD2-score03=67 | RD2-score04=71 | RD2-seed05=6 | RD2-team05=Florida State | RD2-seed06=3 | RD2-team06=Stanford | RD2-score05=70 | RD2-score06=88 | RD2-seed07=7 | RD2-team07=BYU | RD2-seed08=2 | RD2-team08=Oklahoma | RD2-score07=70 | RD2-score08=86 | RD3-seed01=1 | RD3-team01=LSU | RD3-seed02=4 | RD3-team02=DePaul | RD3-score01=66 | RD3-score02=56 | RD3-seed03=3 | RD3-team03=Stanford | RD3-seed04=2 | RD3-team04=Oklahoma | RD3-score03=88 | RD3-score04=74 | RD4-seed01=1 | RD4-team01=LSU | RD4-seed02=3 | RD4-team02=Stanford | RD4-score01=62 | RD4-score02=59

Final Four – Boston, Massachusetts

April 4 | RD1-seed1=Alb2 | RD1-team1=Maryland | RD1-score1=81 | RD1-seed2=Cle1 | RD1-team2=North Carolina | RD1-score2=70 | RD1-seed3=Bpt1 | RD1-team3=Duke | RD1-score3=64 | RD1-seed4=SA1 | RD1-team4=LSU | RD1-score4=45 | RD2-seed1=Alb2 | RD2-team1=Maryland | RD2-score1=78* | RD2-seed2=Bpt1 | RD2-team2=Duke | RD2-score2=75

Alb-Albuquerque; Bpt-Bridgeport; Cle-Cleveland; SA-San Antonio.

Record by conference

Conference# of BidsRecordWin %Round
of 32Sweet
SixteenElite
EightFinal
FourChampionship
Game
Atlantic Coast719–6.76064332
Big East78–7.53343100
Southeastern611–6.64753210
Pacific-1067–6.53851100
Big Ten55–5.50032000
Mountain West46–4.60041100
Big 1244–4.50022000
Atlantic 1021–2.33310000
America East11–1.50010000
Conference USA11–1.50010000

Twenty-one conferences went 0-1: Atlantic Sun Conference, Big Sky Conference, Big South Conference, Big West Conference, Colonial, Horizon League, Ivy League, MAAC, MAC, Mid-Continent, MEAC, Missouri Valley Conference, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southern Conference, Southland, SWAC, Sun Belt Conference, West Coast Conference, and WAC

All-Tournament Team

  • Laura Harper, Maryland
  • Alison Bales, Duke
  • Monique Currie, Duke
  • Erlana Larkins, North Carolina
  • Kristi Toliver, Maryland

Game Officials

  • Melissa Barlow (semifinal)
  • Scott Yarbrough (semifinal)
  • Eric Brewton (semifinal)
  • Dee Kantner (semifinal)
  • Denise Brooks-Clauser (semifinal)
  • Michael Price (semifinal)
  • Lisa Mattingly (final)
  • Bob Trammell (final)
  • Tina Napier (final)

Notes

References

  1. "NCAA Video Vault: Candace Parker becomes first woman to dunk in NCAA tournament history | NCAA.com".
  2. "Candace Parker Dunks Twice as Lady Vols Roll to 102-54 Win over Army".
  3. (January 8, 2009). "Offseason 2008-09: Overseas Roster". Wnba.com.
  4. Nixon, Rick. "2023 Women's Final Four Championship Record Book".
  5. (March 27, 2006). "Boxscore MD". ESPN.
  6. (March 28, 2006). "Maryland Rises in Overtime, 75-65". Los Angeles Times.
  7. (March 27, 2006). "Connecticut holds off Georgia, 77-75". Honolulu Advertiser.
  8. GOLDBERG, JEFF. (March 27, 2006). "Ncaa Women's Tournament: Uconn 77, Georgia 75". Hartford Courant.
  9. Byrnes, Patrick. (March 28, 2006). "duke escapes uconn in overtime thriller". The Chronicle.
  10. (March 27, 2006). "Augustus draws game-saving charge to send LSU to Final Four". ESPN.
  11. (April 2, 2006). "Duke routs LSU to set up all-ACC final". ESPN.
  12. (April 2, 2006). "Harper helps Terps trip up Tar Heels to advance to title game". ESPN.
  13. Orton, Kathy. (April 5, 2006). "A 3-Point Landing". The Washington Post.
  14. Nixon, Rick. "Official 2012 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book". NCAA.
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