1987 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 1987 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament began on March 11, ended on March 29, and featured 40 teams. The Final Four were Texas, Tennessee, Louisiana Tech, and Long Beach State, with Tennessee winning its first title with a 67-44 victory over Louisiana Tech.[1] Tennessee's Tonya Edwards was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.[2]

1987 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Teams40
Finals siteFrank Erwin Center
Austin, Texas
ChampionsTennessee Volunteers (1st title, 2nd title game,
4th Final Four)
Runner-upLouisiana Tech Lady Techsters (3rd title game,
4th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachPat Summitt (1st title)
MOPTonya Edwards (Tennessee)
NCAA Division I women's tournaments
«19861988»

Notable events

Upsets were not unknown in the NCAA tournaments. For example, in the prior year, two 4 seeds made it to the Final Four. However, in the first five NCAA tournaments, once a team reached the Final Four, no team had beaten a higher seeded team. That changed in 1987.[3]

One semifinal game matched defending National Champion Texas against Louisiana Tech. Although both teams were 1 seeds, the Texas team came into the tournament with only a single regular season loss, earning them the number one ranking in the country. In addition, the Final Four was played on the home court of the Longhorns. Despite that, and a crowd of over 15 thousand, the largest crowd in the history of the sport, the Louisiana Tech team managed to beat the Texas team 79–75. The Lady Techsters hit 58.3% of their field goals, the fourth best performance in NCAA Final Four history, and a blistering 73.9% in the second half, missing only six of the 23 shots taken in the second half. Texas tried to wear down Teresa Weatherspoon, but set an NCAA Final Four record with eleven assists, while putting in 19 points of her own.[4][5]

The other semifinal game matched 2 seed Tennessee against 1 seed Long Beach State. Although Long Beach was averaging over 96 points per game, and had scored 102 in the West Regional final against Ohio State, the Lady Vols held the team to 64 points, and upset the 1 seed by a score of 74–64.[5]

The lone loss by Texas in the regular season had been to Tennessee, ending the Longhorns 40 game win streak, but the two teams played again two weeks later, and this time Texas emerged victorious, with a 14-point victory. Tennessee earned the number one ranking in the AP vote after the win over Texas, but they began to stumble after the loss to Texas, with losses to Auburn, Mississippi and Vanderbilt. They played Louisiana Tech in February, and the lady Techsters won by nine points, dropping the Lady Vols to ninth in the poll.[6] The Tennessee team earned a 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament, but after their upset win against Long Beach, they faced the Louisiana Tech team again, a team that had beaten the Volunteers in 11 of the last 12 meetings. One of those meetings had been the 1982 National Championship game, when the Lady Techsters beat the Volunteers by 23 points. The 1987 Championship would turn that result on its head, as Tennessee won by 23 points, upsetting Louisiana Tech 67–44, for their first National Championship.[7]

Records

Teresa Weatherspoon recorded 11 assists in the National Semifinal game, the most scored in a Final Four game since they started keeping records of this statistic in 1985.[3]

Qualifying teams – automatic

Forty teams were selected to participate in the 1987 NCAA Tournament. Eighteen conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 1987 NCAA tournament.[8]

Automatic bids
  Record 
Qualifying schoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
Auburn UniversitySEC29–18–11
Bowling Green State UniversityMAC27–216–09
Eastern Washington UniversityMountain West18–118–410
James Madison UniversityColonial26–312–04
University of KansasBig Eight19–129–57
Manhattan CollegeMAAC20–106–610
New Mexico State UniversityHigh Country23–610–29
North Carolina State UniversityACC23–611–33
Northeast LouisianaSouthland Conference14–99–110
Ohio State UniversityBig Ten24–417–12
Old Dominion UniversitySun Belt Conference17–125–15
Rutgers UniversityAtlantic 1028–217–12
University of Southern CaliforniaPac-1021–715–33
Southern Illinois University CarbondaleMissouri Valley Conference27–218–05
University of Southern MississippiMetro21–86–610
Tennessee Technological UniversityOhio Valley Conference23–612–27
University of Texas at AustinSouthwest28–116–01
Villanova UniversityBig East27–315–16

Qualifying teams – at-large

Twenty-two additional teams were selected to complete the forty invitations.[8]

At-large bids
  Record 
Qualifying schoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
Duke UniversityAtlantic Coast18–97–77
University of GeorgiaSoutheastern26–47–22
University of Illinois at Urbana–ChampaignBig Ten18–911–78
University of IowaBig Ten24–417–13
Kansas State UniversityBig Eight22–89–58
California State University, Long BeachPacific Coast30–217–11
Louisiana State UniversitySoutheastern20–76–34
Louisiana Tech UniversityIndependent26–2–-1
University of MemphisMetro20–810–26
University of MississippiSoutheastern24–47–24
University of New OrleansIndependent25–6–-6
University of North Carolina at Chapel HillAtlantic Coast19–99–54
Northwestern UniversityBig Ten19–912–69
University of OregonPacific-1022–614–47
Pennsylvania State UniversityAtlantic 1023–616–25
Saint Joseph's UniversityAtlantic 1022–814–49
University of South AlabamaSun Belt24–55–18
University of TennesseeSoutheastern23–66–32
Vanderbilt UniversitySoutheastern23–94–55
University of VirginiaAtlantic Coast25–412–23
University of WashingtonPacific-1022–614–48
Western Kentucky UniversitySun Belt24–84–26

Bids by conference

Nineteen conferences earned an automatic bid. In eleven cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Nineteen at-large teams were selected from eight of the conferences. In addition, two independent (not associated with an athletic conference) teams earned at-large bids.[8]

BidsConferenceTeams
6SoutheasternAuburn, Georgia, LSU, Mississippi, Tennessee, Vanderbilt
4Big TenIllinois, Iowa, Northwestern, Ohio St.
4Atlantic CoastDuke, North Carolina, North Carolina St., Virginia
3Sun BeltOld Dominion, South Ala., Western Kentucky
3Pacific-10Oregon, Southern California, Washington
3Atlantic 10Penn St., Rutgers, St. Joseph's
2MetroMemphis, Southern Miss.
2IndependentLouisiana Tech, New Orleans
2Big EightKansas, Kansas St.
1SouthwestTexas
1Pacific CoastLong Beach St.
1Ohio ValleyTennessee Tech
1Mountain WestEastern Washington
1Missouri ValleySouthern Ill.
1Mid-AmericanBowling Green
1Metro AtlanticManhattan
1High CountryNew Mexico St.
1Gulf StarNorthwestern St.
1ColonialJames Madison
1Big EastVillanova

First and second rounds

In 1987, the field remained at 40 teams. The teams were seeded, and assigned to four geographic regions, with seeds 1-10 in each region. In Round 1, seeds 8 and 9 faced each other for the opportunity to face the 1 seed in the second round, while seeds 7 and 10 faced each other for the opportunity to face the 2 seed.In the first two rounds, the higher seed was given the opportunity to host the first round game. In most cases, the higher seed accepted the opportunity. The exceptions:[3]

  • Eighth seeded South Alabama played nine seed Saint Joseph's (PA) at Saint Joseph's (PA)
  • Seventh seeded Eastern Washington played tenth seeded University of Oregon at University of Oregon
  • Second seeded Ohio State played tenth seeded University of Oregon at University of Oregon
  • Third seeded North Carolina State played sixth seeded Villanova at Villanova

Because Oregon hosted both a first and second round game, there were only 23 first and second round locations, rather than 24.

The following table lists the region, host school, venue and the twenty-four first round locations:

Philadelphia
Durham
Austin
Piscataway
Harrisonburg
Villanova
Champaign
Cookeville
1987 NCAA first round (Philadelphia and Villanova are almost indistinguishable)
Chapel Hill
Auburn
Knoxville
Charlottesville
Evanston
Iowa City
Monroe
Athens
Baton Rouge
Ruston
Seattle
Eugene
Los Angeles
University
Long Beach
1987 NCAA second round
RegionRndHostVenueCityState
East1Saint Joseph's UniversityAlumni Memorial FieldhousePhiladelphiaPennsylvania
East1Duke UniversityCameron Indoor StadiumDurhamNorth Carolina
East2University of TexasFrank Erwin CenterAustinTexas
East2Rutgers UniversityLouis Brown Athletic CenterPiscatawayNew Jersey
East2James Madison UniversityJames Madison University Convocation CenterHarrisonburgVirginia
East2Villanova UniversityThe PavilionVillanovaPennsylvania
Mideast1University of IllinoisAssembly Hall (Champaign)ChampaignIllinois
Mideast1Tennessee TechEblen CenterCookevilleTennessee
Mideast2University of North CarolinaCarmichael AuditoriumChapel HillNorth Carolina
Mideast2Auburn UniversityMemorial Coliseum (Beard–Eaves–Memorial Coliseum)AuburnAlabama
Mideast2University of TennesseeStokely Athletic CenterKnoxvilleTennessee
Mideast2University of VirginiaUniversity Hall (University of Virginia)CharlottesvilleVirginia
Midwest1Northwestern UniversityWelsh-Ryan ArenaEvanstonIllinois
Midwest2University of IowaCarver–Hawkeye ArenaIowa CityIowa
Midwest2University of Louisiana at MonroeEwing ColiseumMonroeLouisiana
Midwest2University of GeorgiaGeorgia Coliseum (Stegeman Coliseum)AthensGeorgia
Midwest2Louisiana State UniversityLSU Assembly Center (Pete Maravich Assembly Center)Baton RougeLouisiana
Midwest2Louisiana Tech UniversityThomas Assembly CenterRustonLouisiana
West1University of WashingtonHec Edmundson PavilionSeattleWashington
West1University of OregonMcArthur CourtEugeneOregon
West2University of Southern CaliforniaLos Angeles Memorial Sports ArenaLos AngelesCalifornia
West2University of MississippiTad Smith ColiseumUniversityMississippi
West2Long Beach StateUniversity Gym (Gold Mine)Long BeachCalifornia

Regionals and Final Four

Knoxville
Monroe
Los Angeles
Fayetteville
Austin
1987 NCAA regionals and Final Four

The regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 20 to March 23 at these sites:

Bids by state

The forty teams came from twenty states.Louisiana and Tennessee had the most teams with four each. Thirty states did not have any teams receiving bids.[8]

NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 1987
BidsStateTeams
4LouisianaNorthwestern St., LSU, Louisiana Tech, New Orleans
4TennesseeTennessee Tech, Memphis, Tennessee, Vanderbilt
3IllinoisSouthern Ill., Illinois, Northwestern
3North CarolinaNorth Carolina St., Duke, North Carolina
3PennsylvaniaVillanova, Penn St., St. Joseph's
3VirginiaJames Madison, Old Dominion, Virginia
2AlabamaAuburn, South Ala.
2CaliforniaSouthern California, Long Beach St.
2KansasKansas, Kansas St.
2MississippiSouthern Miss., Mississippi
2OhioBowling Green, Ohio St.
2WashingtonEastern Washington, Washington
1GeorgiaGeorgia
1IowaIowa
1KentuckyWestern Kentucky
1New JerseyRutgers
1New MexicoNew Mexico St.
1New YorkManhattan
1OregonOregon
1TexasTexas

Brackets

First and second round games played at higher seed except where noted.

East regional – Fayetteville, North Carolina (Cumberland County Memorial Arena)

First round
March 11
Second round
March 13–15
Regional semifinals
March 19–20
Regional finals
March 21
            
8South Alabama56
9at St. Joseph's67*
9St. Joseph's56
1Texas86
1Texas91
4James Madison57
5Vanderbilt60
4James Madison68
1Texas85
2Rutgers77
7Duke70
10Manhattan55
7Duke64
2Rutgers78
2Rutgers75
3North Carolina State60
3North Carolina State68
6at Villanova67

Midwest regional – Northeast Louisiana University – Monroe, Louisiana (Fant–Ewing Coliseum)

First round
March 11
Second round
March 13–15
Regional semifinals
March 19–20
Regional finals
March 22
            
8Northwestern62
9Kansas State61*
8Northwestern60
1Louisiana Tech82
1Louisiana Tech66
5Southern Illinois53
5Southern Illinois70
4LSU56
1Louisiana Tech66
3Iowa65
7Kansas78
10Northeast Louisiana72
7Kansas51
2Georgia82
2Georgia60
3Iowa62
3Iowa68
6New Orleans46

Mideast regional – University of Tennessee – Knoxville, Tennessee (Stokely Athletic Center)

First round
March 11
Second round
March 13–15
Regional semifinals
March 19–20
Regional finals
March 22
            
8Illinois80
9Bowling Green64
8Illinois58
1Auburn92
1Auburn77
5Old Dominion61
5Old Dominion76
4North Carolina58
1Auburn61
2Tennessee77
7Tennessee Tech78
10Southern Mississippi66
7Tennessee Tech59
2Tennessee95
2Tennessee66
3Virginia58
3Virginia76
6Memphis State75

West regional – University of Southern California – Los Angeles (Pauley Pavilion)

First round
March 11
Second round
March 13–15
Regional semifinals
March 19–20
Regional finals
March 22
            
8Washington86
9New Mexico State73
8Washington57
1Long Beach State72
1Long Beach State94
4Mississippi55
5Penn State75
4Mississippi80
1Long Beach State102
2Ohio State82
7Eastern Washington56
10at Oregon75
10at Oregon62
2Ohio State76
2Ohio State74
3USC63
3USC81
6Western Kentucky69

Final Four – University of Texas – Austin, Texas (Frank Erwin Center)

National semifinals
March 27
National championship
March 29
      
1ETexas75
1MWLouisiana Tech79
1MWLouisiana Tech44
2METennessee67
2METennessee74
1WLong Beach State64

Record by conference

Fifteen conferences had more than one bid, or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play:[8]

Conference# of BidsRecordWin %Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Southeastern69–5.64364211
Big Ten46–4.600422
Atlantic Coast43–4.42942
Atlantic 1033–3.500311
Pacific-1033–3.50031
Sun Belt31–3.25021
Independent24–2.66721111
Big Eight21–2.3331
Metro20–21
Pacific Coast13–1.7501111
Southwest13–1.7501111
Colonial11–1.50011
Gateway11–1.50011
Ohio Valley11–1.5001

Six conferences went 0-1: Big East, Gulf Star Conference, High Country, MAAC, MAC, and Mountain West[8]

All-Tournament team

Game officials

  • Bill Stokes (semifinal)
  • Larry Sheppard (semifinal)
  • June Courteau (Semi-Final, Final)
  • Patty Broderick (Semi-Final, Final) [8]

See also

References