NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament upsets
This is a list of upsets by teams seeded 11 or higher that have occurred in the NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1994.
First round
16 vs. 1
The first 16 seed ever to win a game in an NCAA Division I basketball tournament was Harvard in 1998 against Stanford. According to an Associated Press retrospective on the 10th anniversary of the game in 2008, "The difference between the teams was much smaller than usual for a No. 1 and a 16 seed."[1]
Harvard had two years of tournament experience and the nation's leading scorer that season in Allison Feaster. Stanford suffered two devastating injuries during the run-up to the tournament. First, Vanessa Nygaard tore an ACL in the Cardinal's final regular-season game against Oregon State. Because the extent of her injury was not known at the time the tournament field was selected, the Cardinal still received a 1 seed. Then, in the team's first practice after the tournament selection, leading scorer and rebounder Kristin Folkl also tore an ACL.[1]
The men's tournament has also seen only one 16 seed upset, it occurred in 2018, when UMBC knocked off overall top-seed Virginia, 74-54. Prior to UMBC's victory over Virginia, 16-seeds were winless in 135 attempts (since 1985) to defeat a 1-seed.
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
1998 | Harvard | Stanford | 71-67 |
15 vs. 2 and 14 vs. 3
Unlike the men's tournament, in which eight (8) 15 seeds and twenty-one (21) 14 seeds have won their opening games since that tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, no 14 or 15 seed has ever won a game in the women's tournament. The closest any 15 seed came to winning was in 2017, when Long Beach State lost 56–55 to Oregon State.
13 vs. 4
Six 13 seeds have defeated 4 seeds in the first round.
By contrast, the men's tournament has seen 20 such upsets since 1994. Eight more occurred between 1985 and 1993, when the men's tournament featured 64 teams but the women's tournament had fewer entrants (32 in 1985, 40 from 1986 to 1988, and 48 from 1989 to 1993).
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
2012 | Marist | Georgia | 76-70 |
2007 | Marist | Ohio State | 67-63 |
2005 | Liberty | Penn State | 78-70 |
2004 | Middle Tennessee | North Carolina | 67-62 |
2000 | Rice | UC Santa Barbara | 67-64 |
1994 | Texas A&M | Florida | 78-76 |
12 vs. 5
There have been twenty-two (22) 12-seeds to defeat 5-seeds in the first round. The men's tournament has seen 38 such wins since 1994, with nine more taking place between 1985 and 1993.
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
2018 | Florida Gulf Coast | Missouri | 80–70 |
2017 | Quinnipiac | Marquette | 68–65 |
2016 | South Dakota State | Miami (FL) | 74-71 |
Albany | Florida | 61-59 | |
2014 | BYU | NC State | 72-57 |
2013 | Kansas | Colorado | 67–52 |
2010 | Green Bay | Virginia | 69-67 |
2009 | Ball State | Tennessee | 71-55 |
Gonzaga | Pittsburgh | 75-59 | |
2006 | Tulsa | NC State | 71-61 |
2005 | Middle Tennessee | NC State | 60-58 |
2004 | Maryland | Miami (FL) | 86-85 |
2002 | Mississippi State | Boston College | 65–59 |
UC Santa Barbara | Louisiana Tech | 57–56 | |
2000 | SMU | NC State | 64-63 |
1998 | Colorado State | Drake | 81-75 |
Youngstown State | Memphis | 91-80 | |
1997 | Marquette | Clemson | 70-66 |
1996 | Notre Dame | Purdue | 73-60 |
San Francisco | Florida | 68-61 | |
1995 | Montana | San Diego State | 57–46 |
1994 | Western Kentucky | Rutgers | 84-73 |
11 vs. 6
Thirty-one 11 seeds have won their first-round games against 6 seeds. By contrast, 38 such upsets have occurred in the men's tournament since 1994, with 13 more occurring between 1985 and 1993.
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
2018 | Central Michigan | LSU | 78-69 |
Buffalo | South Florida | 102-79 | |
Creighton | Iowa | 76-70 | |
2015 | Gonzaga | George Washington | 82-69 |
Miami(FL) | Washington | 86-80 | |
Arkansas-Little Rock | Texas A&M | 69-60 | |
2014 | Florida | Dayton | 83-69 |
James Madison | Gonzaga | 72-63 | |
2012 | Gonzaga | Rutgers | 86-73 |
Kansas | Nebraska | 57-49 | |
2011 | Gonzaga | Iowa | 92-86 |
2010 | Arkansas–Little Rock | Georgia Tech | 63-53 |
San Diego State | Texas | 74-63 | |
2009 | Mississippi State | Texas | 71-63 |
2008 | Florida State | Ohio State | 60-49 |
2007 | West Virginia | Xavier | 65-52 |
2006 | Hartford | Temple | 64-58 |
New Mexico | Florida | 83-59 | |
TCU | Texas A&M | 69-65 | |
2004 | UC Santa Barbara | Colorado | 76-49 |
2003 | Notre Dame | Arizona | 59-47 |
2002 | BYU | Florida | 90-52 |
2001 | TCU | Penn State | 77-75 |
2000 | Stephen F. Austin | Xavier | 73-72 |
UAB | Oregon | 80-79 (OT) | |
1999 | Saint Joseph's | Duke | 83-72 |
SMU | Toledo | 91-76 | |
1998 | UC Santa Barbara | Vanderbilt | 76-71 (OT) |
Virginia Tech | Wisconsin | 75-64 | |
1996 | Stephen F. Austin | Oregon State | 67-65 |
1995 | Louisville | Oregon | 67-65 |
Second round
16 seeds
Harvard, the only 16 seed to advance to the second round, lost to Arkansas in the second round. No 16 seed has ever advanced to the Sweet Sixteen in either the men's or women's tournaments.
15 and 14 seeds
Unlike the men's tournament, in which one 15 seed and two 14 seeds have won their second-round games since that tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, no 14 or 15 seed has ever won a game in that round.
13 seeds
Three 13 seeds have won their second-round games, compared to six in the men's tournament (five of which occurred since 1998). All three of the winning 13 seeds in the women's tournament defeated 5 seeds.
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
2007 | Marist | Middle Tennessee | 73-59 |
2005 | Liberty | DePaul | 88-79 |
1994 | Texas A&M | San Diego State | 75-72 (OT) |
12 seeds
Four 12 seeds have won their second-round games, as opposed to 13 in the men's tournament since 1994 and seven more from 1985 to 1993. All three 12 seeds to win at this stage of the women's tournament defeated 4 seeds.
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
2017 | Quinnipiac | Miami (FL) | 85-78 |
2014 | BYU | Nebraska | 80-76 |
2013 | Kansas | South Carolina | 75-69 |
1996 | San Francisco | Duke | 64-60 |
11 seeds
A total of 11 11 seeds have won their second-round games and advanced to the Sweet 16. This compares to 14 in the men's tournament since 1994, with seven more occurring between 1985 and 1993.
Since no 14 seed has ever advanced to this point in the women's tournament, all defeated teams were 3 seeds.
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
2018 | Central Michigan | Ohio State | 95-78 |
Buffalo | Florida State | 86-65 | |
2015 | Gonzaga | Oregon State | 76-65 |
2012 | Gonzaga | Miami (FL) | 65-54 |
Kansas | Delaware | 70-64 | |
2011 | Gonzaga | UCLA | 89-75 |
2010 | San Diego State | West Virginia | 64-55 |
2004 | UC Santa Barbara | Houston | 56-52 |
2003 | Notre Dame | Kansas State | 59-53 |
2002 | BYU | Iowa State | 75-69 |
2000 | UAB | Mississippi State | 78-72 |
1996 | Stephen F. Austin | Clemson | 93–88 (OT) |
Sweet Sixteen
13 seeds
To date, no 13 seed, in either the men's or women's tournament, has advanced to the Elite Eight.
12 seeds
Unlike the men's tournament, in which one 12 seed won its Sweet 16 game since 1985, no 12 seed has ever won a game in the women's tournament.
11 seeds
Only one team seeded 11 or lower has won in the Sweet 16 and advanced to the Elite Eight—11 seed Gonzaga in 2011, who defeated 7 seed Louisville. By contrast, four such teams have won at this stage in the men's tournament since 1994, with two more doing so from 1985 to 1993.
Year | Winner | Loser | Score |
2011 | Gonzaga | Louisville | 76–69 |
Elite Eight
No team seeded 10 or lower has ever advanced to the Final Four; Gonzaga lost its 2011 regional final 83–60 to Stanford. Oregon lost its regional final to UConn, 90-52, in 2017, as a 10 seed, and Lamar in 1991 lost their regional final in 1991. In the men's tournament, four 11 seeds and one 10 seed have advanced to the Final Four—10th seed Syracuse in 2016, and 11th seeds Loyola-Chicago in 2018, VCU in 2011, George Mason in 2006, and LSU in 1986.
References
- General
- "The Tournament Field: Tournament Brackets" (PDF). 2013 Women's Final Four Records. NCAA. pp. 166–96. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
- Specific
- 1 2 Associated Press (March 18, 2008). "No. 16 Harvard over No. 1 Stanford still resonates 10 years later". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 26, 2013.