2024-03-31 03:04:45
This is the schedule for the 2024 NCAA women’s basketball tournament for March Madness. Elite Eight action begins Sunday, March 31.
- Selection Sunday: 8 p.m. ET Sunday, March 17 on ESPN
- First Four: March 20-21
- First round: March 22-23
- Second round: March 24-25
- Sweet 16: March 29-30
- Elite Eight: March 31-April 1
- Final Four: Friday, April 5 at 7 p.m. with the second semifinal starting 30 minutes following the first game ends. Both will be broadcast on ESPN and hosted at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse in Cleveland, Ohio.
- NCAA championship game: Sunday, April 7 at 3 p.m. ET on ABC, hosted at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse in Cleveland, Ohio.
These are the sites for the women’s tournament in 2024:
2024 Regional ROUND SITES
Round
City
Venue
Dates
Host
Sweet 16/Elite Eight
Albany, N.Y.
MVP Arena
March 29 – April 1
MAAC
Sweet 16/Elite Eight
Portland, Ore.
Moda Center
March 29 – April 1
Oregon State
Click or tap here to view the 2024 bracket as a pdf. | Click or tap here for the 2024 interactive bracket.
2024 March Madness women’s TV times and schedule (all times ET)
Sunday, March 31 — Elite Eight
Monday, April 1 — Elite Eight
Friday, April 5 — Final Four
- TBD vs. TBD | 7 p.m. | ESPN
- TBD vs. TBD | 9:30 p.m. | ESPN
Sunday, April 7 — National championship
- TBD vs. TBD | 3 p.m. | ABC
Wednesday, March 20 — First Four
Thursday, March 21 — First Four
Friday, March 22 — First round
- (8) North Carolina 59(9) Michigan State 56
- (2) Ohio State 80(15) Maine 57
- (11) Middle Tennessee 71(6) Louisville 69
- (1) South Carolina 91(16) Presbyterian 39
- (7) Duke 72(10) Richmond 61
- (1) Texas 82(16) Drexel 42
- (4) Virginia Tech 92, (13) Marshall 49
- (3) LSU 70, (14) Rice 60
- (4) Kansas State 78, (13) Portland 65
- (8) Alabama 82, (9) Florida State 74
- (5) Baylor 80, (12) Vanderbilt 63
- (5) Colorado 86, (12) Drake 72
- (7) Iowa State 93, (10) Maryland 86
- (3) Oregon State 73, (14) Eastern Washington 51
- (2) Stanford 79, (15) Norfolk State 50
- (6) Nebraska 61, (11) Texas A&M 59
Saturday, March 23 — First round
- (6) Tennessee 92(11) Green Bay 63
- (3) UConn 86(14) Jackson State 64
- (4) Indiana 89(13) Fairfield 56
- (8) Kansas 81(9) Michigan 72 (OT)
- (2) Notre Dame 81(15) Kent State 67
- (3) NC State 64(14) Chattanooga 45
- (1) Iowa 91(16) Holy Cross 65
- (6) Syracuse 74, (11) Arizona 69
- (5) Oklahoma 73, (12) FGCU 70
- (1) Southern California 87(16) Texas A&M Corpus Christi 55
- (7) Ole Miss 67(10) Marquette 55
- (8) West Virginia 63, (9) Princeton 53
- (7) Creighton 87(10) UNLV 73
- (4) Gonzaga 75(13) UC Irvine 56
- (2) UCLA 84(15) California Baptist 55
- (5) Utah 68, (12) South Dakota State 54
Sunday, March 24 — Second round
Monday, March 25 — Second round
Friday, March 29 — Sweet 16
Saturday, March 30 — Sweet 16
Here are the future sites and dates for the Final Four:
Year
city
venue
dates
host
2024
Cleveland
Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
April 5 & 7
Mid-American Conference, Greater Cleveland Sports Commission
2025
Tampa, FL
Amalie Arena
April 4 & 6
University of South Florida, Tampa Bay Sports Commission
2026
Phoenix
Footprint Center
April 3 & 5
Arizona State University
2027
Columbus, OH
Nationwide Arena
April 2 & 4
The Ohio State University, Greater Columbus Sports Commission
2028
Indianapolis
Gainbridge Fieldhouse
March 31 & April 2
Horizon League, IUPUI, Indiana Sports Corp
2029
San Antonio
Alamodome
March 30 & April 1
University of Incarnate Word, UTSA, San Antonio Sports
2030
Portland, OR
Moda Center
April 5 & 7
University of Portland, Sport Oregon
2031
Dallas
American Airlines Center
April 4 & 6
Big 12 Conference, Dallas Sports Commission
Here are the future sites for the championship:
March Madness: Future sites
YEAR/DATES
CITY
HOST
FACILITY
2024: April 5 and 7
Cleveland
Mid American Conference and the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission
Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
2025: April 4 and 6
Tampa Bay, Florida
University of South Florida and the Tampa Bay Sports Commission
Amalie Arena
2026: April 3 and 5
Phoenix
Arizona State University
Footprint Center
2027: April 2 and 4
Columbus, Ohio
The Ohio State University and the Greater Columbus Sports Commission
Nationwide Arena
2028: March 31 and April 2
Indianapolis
Horizon League, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and the Indiana Sports Corp
Gainbridge Fieldhouse
2029: March 30 and April 1
San Antonio
University of the Incarnate Word, University of Texas at San Antonio and San Antonio Sports
Alamodome
2030: April 5 and 7
Portland, Oregon
University of Portland and Sport Oregon
Moda Center
2031: April 4 and 6
Dallas
Big 12 Conference and the Dallas Sports Commission
American Airlines Center
Here is the complete list of teams who have won the DI national championship:
NCAA DI women’s basketball: Champions, history
YEAR
CHAMPION (RECORD)
COACH
SCORE
RUNNER-UP
SITE
2023
LSU (34-2)
Kim Mulkey
102-85
Iowa
Dallas, Texas
2022
South Carolina (36-2)
Dawn Staley
64-49
Connecticut
Minneapolis, Minn.
2021
Stanford (31-2)
Tara VanderVeer
54-53
Arizona
San Antonio, Texas
2019
Baylor (37-1)
Kim Mulkey
82-81
Notre Dame
Tampa, Fla.
2018
Notre Dame (34-3)
Muffet McGraw
61-58
Mississippi State
Columbus, Ohio
2017
South Carolina (33-4)
Dawn Staley
67-55
Mississippi State
Dallas, Texas
2016
Connecticut (38-0)
Geno Auriemma
82-51
Syracuse
Indianapolis, Ind.
2015
Connecticut (38-1)
Geno Auriemma
63-53
Notre Dame
Tampa, Fla.
2014
Connecticut (40-0)
Geno Auriemma
79-58
Notre Dame
Nashville, Tenn.
2013
Connecticut (35-4)
Geno Auriemma
93-60
Louisville
New Orleans, La.
2012
Baylor (40-0)
Kim Mulkey
80-61
Notre Dame
Denver, Colo.
2011
Texas A&M (33-5)
Gary Blair
76-70
Notre Dame
Indianapolis, Ind.
2010
Connecticut (39-0)
Geno Auriemma
53-47
Stanford
San Antonio, Texas
2009
Connecticut (39-0)
Geno Auriemma
76-54
Louisville
St. Louis, Mo.
2008
Tennessee (36-2)
Pat Summitt
64-48
Stanford
Tampa, Fla.
2007
Tennessee (34-3)
Pat Summitt
59-46
Rutgers
Cleveland, Ohio
2006
Maryland (34-4)
Brenda Frese
78-75 (OT)
Duke
Boston, Mass.
2005
Baylor (33-3)
Kim Mulkey
84-62
Michigan State
Indianapolis, Ind.
2004
Connecticut (31-4)
Geno Auriemma
70-61
Tennessee
New Orleans, La.
2003
Connecticut (37-1)
Geno Auriemma
73-68
Tennessee
Atlanta, Ga.
2002
Connecticut (39-0)
Geno Auriemma
82-70
Oklahoma
San Antonio, Texas
2001
Notre Dame (34-2)
Muffet McGraw
68-66
Purdue
St. Louis, Mo.
2000
Connecticut (36-1)
Geno Auriemma
71-52
Tennessee
Philadelphia, Pa.
1999
Purdue (34-1)
Carolyn Peck
62-45
Duke
San Jose, Calif.
1998
Tennessee (39-0)
Pat Summitt
93-75
Louisiana Tech
Kansas City, Mo.
1997
Tennessee (29-10)
Pat Summitt
68-59
Old Dominion
Cincinnati, Ohio
1996
Tennessee (32-4)
Pat Summitt
83-65
Georgia
Charlotte, N.C.
1995
Connecticut (35-0)
Geno Auriemma
70-64
Tennessee
Minneapolis, Minn.
1994
North Carolina (33-2)
Sylvia Hatchell
60-59
Louisiana Tech
Richmond, Va.
1993
Texas Tech (31-3)
Marsha Sharp
84-82
Ohio State
Atlanta, Ga.
1992
Stanford (30-3)
Tara VanDerveer
78-62
Western Kentucky
Los Angeles, Calif.
1991
Tennessee (30-5)
Pat Summitt
70-67 (OT)
Virginia
New Orleans, La.
1990
Stanford (32-1)
Tara VanDerveer
88-81
Auburn
Knoxville, Tenn.
1989
Tennessee (35-2)
Pat Summitt
76-60
Auburn
Tacoma, Wash.
1988
Louisiana Tech (32-2)
Leon Barmore
56-54
Auburn
Tacoma, Wash.
1987
Tennessee (28-6)
Pat Summitt
67-44
Louisiana Tech
Austin, Texas
1986
Texas (34-0)
Jody Conradt
97-81
Southern California
Lexington, Ky.
1985
Old Dominion (31-3)
Marianne Stanley
70-65
Georgia
Austin, Texas
1984
Southern California (29-4)
Linda Sharp
72-61
Tennessee
Los Angeles, Calif.
1983
Southern California (31-2)
Linda Sharp
69-67
Louisiana Tech
Norfolk, Va.
1982
Louisiana Tech (35-1)
Sonja Hogg
76-62
Cheyney
Norfolk, Va.
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