2016 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament


The 2016 NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Tournament was played between March and April 2016, with the Final Four played April 3 & 5. The regional locations were four neutral sites: Bridgeport, Connecticut, Dallas, Lexington, Kentucky, and Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The Final Four was played at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. This was the third time that Indianapolis hosted a Women's Final Four Basketball tournament; the prior times were in 2005 and 2011. Connecticut won their fourth consecutive national championship, defeating Syracuse 82–51.
This was the last Women's Final Four to be played on the then Sunday/Tuesday schedule. Starting in 2017, the Final Four was changed to a Friday/Sunday schedule, which it used from its inception in 1982 through 1990, then again from 1996 through 2002. Tennessee continued its record streak of making every NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament at 35 consecutive appearances. Connecticut also continued its record streak of nine consecutive Final Four appearances.

2016 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues

The first two rounds, also referred to as the subregionals were played at the sites of the top 16 seeds, as was done in 2015.
Regional Semifinals and Finals
National Semifinals and Championship
became the first Ivy League team to ever receive an at-large bid in either the Division I men's or women's tournament. Notably, this came in the last season in which the Ivy League did not hold a postseason tournament.
Tennessee received a #7 seed, the lowest in program history.
Kentucky had the chance to play all of its regional games in its home city. The subregional was held on the Kentucky campus at the women's primary home of Memorial Coliseum, and the regional was held at Rupp Arena, normally home to the Kentucky men's team but also an occasional home for the women's team, in downtown Lexington.
Five teams made their first-ever tournament appearance: Buffalo, Central Arkansas, Duquesne, Iona, and Jacksonville. Only Duquesne was an at-large entry; the others all won their conference tournaments.
Upsets were the theme of the day on the first round of Sweet 16 play. In all four contests, the lower seated team knocked off the higher seeded team. Fourth-seeded Syracuse took out the number one seed in their region, South Carolina. Fourth-seeded Stanford defeated the number one seed in their region, Notre Dame. Seventh-seeded Washington played third-seeded Kentucky on their own court and won the game — becoming the first team to win a true road game in the Sweet Sixteen round since North Carolina defeated Arizona State in 2005 — to move on to the Elite Eight. Seventh-seeded Tennessee defeated the third-seeded Ohio State. This left two four seeds and two seven seeds in the two regions playing on this day.

Subregionals Tournament & automatic qualifiers procedures

The basis for the subregionals returned to the approach used between 1982 and 2002; the top sixteen teams, as chosen in the bracket selection process, hosted the first two rounds on campus. The process was generally followed in 2016, with the exception that if one of the top 16 teams was unable to host, another team would be selected. Michigan State was a 4 seed, but was unable to host because the Spartans' home of the Breslin Center hosted a state high school tournament during the weekend of the first two rounds. As a result, Mississippi State hosted in Starkville.
A total of 64 teams entered the 2016 tournament. Of the 32 automatic bids, 31 were given to teams that won their respective conference tournaments. The remaining automatic bid went to the Ivy League regular season champion because they did not hold a conference tournament. The remaining 32 teams were granted "at-large" bids, which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.
The Selection Committee also seeded the entire field from 1 to 64.

Automatic qualifiers

The following teams automatically qualified for the 2016 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament.
ConferenceTeamAppearanceLast bid
ACCNotre Dame23rd2015
America EastAlbany5th2015
AmericanConnecticut28th2015
Atlantic 10George Washington17th2015
Atlantic SunJacksonville1stNever
Big 12Baylor15th2015
Big EastSt. John's10th2014
Big SkyIdaho4th2014
Big South2nd2007
Big TenMaryland24th2015
Big WestHawaii6th1998
ColonialJames Madison12th2015
C-USAMiddle Tennessee18th2014
HorizonGreen Bay16th2015
Ivy LeaguePenn4th2013
MAACIona1stNever
MACBuffalo1stNever
MEAC3rd2009
Missouri ValleyMissouri State14th2006
Mountain WestColorado State6th2002
Northeast4th2014
Ohio Valley2nd2007
Pac-12Oregon State8th2015
PatriotArmy3rd2014
SECSouth Carolina13th2015
SouthernChattanooga14th2015
SouthlandCentral Arkansas1stNever
SWAC3rd2015
SummitSouth Dakota State7th2015
Sun BeltTroy2nd1997
WACNew Mexico State4th2015
West CoastSan Francisco4th1997

Tournament seeds

Tournament records

Bridgeport Regional, Bridgeport, CT

First round

Bridgeport Regional Final

Bridgeport Regional all tournament team

First round

Dallas Regional Final

Dallas Regional all tournament team

First-round

Lexington Regional Final

Lexington Regional all tournament team

First round

Sioux Falls Regional Final

Sioux Falls Regional all tournament team

During the Final Four round, regardless of the seeds of the participating teams, the champion of the top overall top seed's region plays the champion of the fourth-ranked top seed's region, and the champion of the second overall top seed's region plays the champion of the third-ranked top seed's region.

Bankers Life Fieldhouse - Indianapolis, IN

National Semifinals

National Championship

Final Four all-tournament team

Television

had US television rights to all games during the tournament. For the first and second round, ESPN aired select games nationally on ESPN, ESPNU, or ESPNews. All other games aired regionally on ESPN, ESPN2, or ESPN3 and were streamed online via WatchESPN. Most of the nation got whip-a-round coverage during this time, which allowed ESPN to rotate between the games and focus the nation on the game that has the closest score. The regional semifinals and national semifinals were split between ESPN and ESPN2. ESPN aired the regional finals and the national championship game.

Studio host & analysts

First & Second Rounds Friday/Sunday
Sweet Sixteen & Elite Eight Friday/Sunday
Final Four
First & Second Rounds Saturday/Monday
Sweet Sixteen & Elite Eight Saturday/Monday
Championship
has exclusive radio rights to the entire tournament. Teams participating in the Regional Finals, Final Four, and Championship are allowed to have their own local broadcasts, but they aren't allowed to stream those broadcasts online.
Regional Finals Sunday
Final Four
Regional Finals Monday
Championship