2016–17 NCAA Division I women's basketball season
2016–17 NCAA Division I women's basketball season | |
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Preseason AP No. 1 | Notre Dame |
Regular season | November 11, 2016 – March 3, 2017 |
NCAA Tournament | 2017 |
Tournament dates | March 16, 2017 – April 2, 2017 |
National Championship | American Airlines Center Dallas, Texas |
NCAA Champions | South Carolina |
Other champions | Michigan (WNIT) Rice (WBI) |
Player of the Year (Naismith, Wooden) | Kelsey Plum, Washington |
The 2016–17 NCAA Division I women's basketball season began on November 11, 2016 and ended with the Final Four title game in Dallas on April 2, 2017, won by South Carolina. Practices officially began on September 30, 2016.
Season headlines
[edit]- April 20 – The NCAA announced its Academic Progress Rate (APR) sanctions for the 2016–17 school year. A total of 23 Division I programs in 13 sports were declared ineligible for postseason play due to failure to meet the required APR benchmark, with Southern being the only women's basketball team so penalized.[1]
- April 28 – The Atlantic Sun Conference announced that effective with the 2016–17 school year, it would rebrand itself as the ASUN Conference.[2]
- November 2 – The Associated Press preseason All-American team was released. South Carolina forward A'ja Wilson was the leading vote-getter (32 votes). Joining her on the team were Ohio State guard Kelsey Mitchell (31 votes), Notre Dame forward Brianna Turner (29), Baylor forward Nina Davis and Washington guard Kelsey Plum.[3]
- November 23 – In what ESPN called "one of the most bizarre scenarios imaginable at a major sporting event", top-ranked Notre Dame and Louisiana–Lafayette used two different venues during Notre Dame's 91–51 win. The game began at Campbell Center, a high school venue in Houston, but a power outage during the second quarter prompted the teams to complete the game at another venue. Rice, whose women's team had just completed a home game, offered its Tudor Fieldhouse, and the two teams bused to that venue and finished the game there.[4]
- December 5 – The ASUN Conference announced that North Alabama would move from the Division II Gulf South Conference and join the ASUN in 2018.[5]
- January 7 – A bench-clearing brawl broke out during the third quarter of the UNLV–Utah State game after a UNLV player was fouled. Four players from each team were ejected.[6] Three days later, the Mountain West Conference, home to both schools, issued one-game suspensions to three participants in the brawl (two from UNLV and one from Utah State) and reprimanded six other participants.[7]
- January 13 – The Western Athletic Conference announced that California Baptist would move from the Division II Pacific West Conference and join the WAC in 2018.[8]
- January 26 – The Summit League announced that North Dakota, then a member of the Big Sky Conference, would join the league in 2018.[9]
- February 2 – The Colonial Athletic Association announced that two conference wins by Charleston would be treated as Charleston losses for purposes of seeding in the conference tournament, though it did not (and could not) reverse the results. The conference confirmed that the Cougars had provided "improperly sized" basketballs in the two games, though it would not confirm that men's basketballs were used instead of women's balls.[10]
Milestones and records
[edit]- December 8 – In Ohio State's 108–73 win over Southern, the Buckeyes' Kelsey Mitchell became the fastest Division I women's player to reach 2,000 career points, reaching the mark in her 79th game. The previous record of 82 was held by Missouri State's Jackie Stiles.[11]
- December 11 – Kelsey Plum became the all-time leading scorer in Pac-12 Conference history (for either women or men), passing the former record of Stanford's Chiney Ogwumike during Washington's 92–66 win over Boise State.[12][a]
- December 16 – Baylor defeated Winthrop 140–32, setting a new Division I women's basketball record for victory margin.[13]
- January 10 – UConn crushed South Florida 102–37 to give the Huskies their 90th straight win, equaling the program's own record for the longest winning streak by a Division I team of either sex.[14]
- January 13 – Plum became the 12th player in Division I women's history with 3,000 career points during Washington's 90–73 win over Arizona.[15]
- January 14 – UConn defeated SMU 88–48 for its 91st straight win, establishing a new Division I record streak.[16]
- February 3 – Stanford defeated USC 58–42, giving Cardinal head coach Tara VanDerveer her 1,000th career win. She joined late Tennessee head coach Pat Summitt and current Duke men's head coach Mike Krzyzewski as the only Division I coaches at that time to reach the milestone.[17]
- February 13 – UConn extended its record winning streak to 100 games with a 66–55 win over South Carolina.[18]
- February 25 – Plum scored 57 points, a school record for either sex, in Washington's 84–77 win over Utah, surpassing Stiles for the top spot on the all-time NCAA Division I women's career scoring list.[19][b]
- March 6 – In the American Athletic Conference tournament final, UConn's Katie Lou Samuelson made all 10 of her three-point attempts, setting a new women's Division I record for most consecutive three-pointers in a game. The Huskies blasted South Florida 100–44 to enter the NCAA Tournament unbeaten.[20]
- March 18 – In the first round of the NCAA tournament, Texas A&M came back from a 21-point deficit early in the fourth quarter, ending on a 25–1 run to defeat Penn 63–61. This set a new record for largest comeback in the Division I women's tournament, surpassing the previous record of 16 points by Notre Dame in 2001 and Michigan State in 2005.[21]
- March 19 – In the same round, Baylor set two all-time tournament records in its 119–30 pasting of Texas Southern:[22]
- The 89-point margin was the largest ever, surpassing the previous record of 74 set by Tennessee against North Carolina A&T in 1994.
- Baylor's 119 points were the most ever scored in regulation, surpassing the previous record of 116 set by Ohio State in 1998 and equaled twice by UConn, including earlier that same day.
- March 21 – In the second round of the NCAA tournament, Plum surpassed Stiles' D-I record for points in a season, scoring 38 in the Huskies' 108–82 win over Oklahoma and finishing the game with 1,080 points on the season.[23] Plum eventually finished with 1,109 points on the season and 3,527 for her career.[24]
- March 31 – UConn's record winning streak ended at 111 games with a 66–64 overtime loss to Mississippi State on a buzzer-beater by the Bulldogs' Morgan William.[25]
Coaching wins milestones
[edit]- 1000 victories - Tara VanDerveer, Stanford, February 3 versus USC.[26]
- 600 victories - Gordy Presnell, Boise State, December 18 versus Portland.[27]
- 500 victories - Jeff Mittie, Kansas State, December 4 versus Omaha.[28]
- 500 victories - Sandra Rushing, Central Arkansas, February 11 versus Nicholls.[29]
- 500 victories - Kim Mulkey, Baylor, February 25 versus Texas Tech.[30]
Conference membership changes
[edit]Only one school joined a new conference for 2016–17:
School | Former conference | New conference |
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Coastal Carolina | Big South Conference | Sun Belt Conference |
Pre-season polls
[edit]The top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.
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New arenas
[edit]- South Dakota opened the new Sanford Coyote Sports Center. The completion of the 6,000-seat venue saw the South Dakota men's basketball, women's basketball, and women's volleyball teams move out of the considerably larger DakotaDome, which remains home to football, track & field, and swimming & diving. The first women's basketball game in the new arena was the opening leg of a November 13 doubleheader with the men's team, with the Coyotes defeating Stephen F. Austin 80–74.[31]
- North Dakota State opened the renovated Scheels Center. This completion brought the previously outdated Bison Sports Arena up to full Division 1 standards. The arena resumed competition of their men's basketball, women's basketball, and wrestling teams inside the Scheels Center. The renovated arena seats 5,700 people on the North side of NDSU's campus in Fargo, North Dakota. The first women's game played in the renovated arena was an exhibition on November 3, 2016 against NCAA Division II Bemidji State, the Bison winning that game 79-59.[32] The first official women's game was on November 12, 2016; the Bison beat Dickinson State University 70-63.[33]
In addition, Alabama returned women's home games to Coleman Coliseum, home to Alabama men's basketball since the venue's opening in 1968. The Crimson Tide women began play in 1974 at Foster Auditorium, and split home games between the two facilities until moving full-time into the Coliseum in 1981. The women would move back to Foster near the end of the 2010–11 season, and used that as their main venue until returning to the Coliseum.[34]
This proved to be the final season for four Division I teams in their then-current venues.
- DePaul left its current on-campus home of McGrath–Phillips Arena for the new off-campus Wintrust Arena, a 10,000-seat venue that opened in October 2017 at the McCormick Place convention center on Chicago's Near South Side. The new arena also houses the DePaul men's team.[35]
- NJIT left one on-campus venue for another. The aging Fleisher Center (capacity 1,600) was replaced by the Wellness and Events Center (capacity 3,500) for the 2017–18 season.[36]
- Robert Morris closed the Charles L. Sewall Center, home to the Colonials since 1985, in June 2017. The UPMC Events Center is currently being built at the Sewall Center site and is scheduled to open in the middle of the 2018–19 basketball season.[37] Until that time, the Colonials are playing at the Student Recreation and Fitness Center, which was built at the school's North Athletic Complex as part of the UPMC Events Center project and opened in September 2017.[38]
- Wofford also moved within its campus, going from Benjamin Johnson Arena (capacity 3,500) to the slightly smaller Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium (capacity 3,400).
Regular season
[edit]Early preseason tournament
[edit]Tournament upsets
[edit]For this list, an "upset" is defined as a win by a team seeded 7 or more spots below its defeated opponent.
Date | Winner | Score | Loser | Region | Round |
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March 18 | Oregon (10) | 71–70 | Temple (7) | Bridgeport | Round of 64 |
March 18 | Quinnipiac (12) | 68–65 | Marquette (5) | Lexington | Round of 64 |
March 20 | Oregon (10) | 74–65 | Duke (2) | Bridgeport | Round of 32 |
March 20 | Quinnipiac (12) | 85–78 | Miami (FL) (4) | Bridgeport | Round of 32 |
March 25 | Oregon (10) | 77–63 | Maryland (2) | Bridgeport | Sweet Sixteen |
Conference winners and tournaments
[edit]Each of the 32 Division I athletic conferences ends its regular season with a single-elimination tournament. The team with the best regular-season record in each conference is given the number one seed in each tournament, with tiebreakers used as needed in the case of ties for the top seeding. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2017 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament. This will be the first season in which the Ivy League holds a conference tournament.[39]
Award winners
[edit]All-America teams
[edit]The NCAA has never recognized a consensus All-America team in women's basketball. This differs from the practice in men's basketball, in which the NCAA uses a combination of selections by the Associated Press (AP), the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC), the Sporting News, and the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) to determine a consensus All-America team. The selection of a consensus team is possible because all four organizations select at least a first and second team, with only the USBWA not selecting a third team.
However, of the major selectors in women's basketball, only the AP divides its selections into separate teams. The women's counterpart to the NABC, the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA), selects a single 10-member (plus ties) team, as does the USBWA. The NCAA does not recognize Sporting News as an All-America selector in women's basketball.
Major player of the year awards
[edit]- Wooden Award: Kelsey Plum, Washington[75]
- Naismith Award: Kelsey Plum, Washington[76]
- Associated Press Player of the Year: Kelsey Plum, Washington[77]
- Wade Trophy: Kelsey Plum, Washington[78]
- Ann Meyers Drysdale Women's Player of the Year (USBWA): Kelsey Plum, Washington[79]
- espnW National Player of the Year: Kelsey Plum, Washington[80]
Major freshman of the year awards
[edit]- USBWA National Freshman of the Year: Sabrina Ionescu, Oregon[79]
- WBCA Freshman of the Year (inaugural award): Destiny Slocum, Maryland[81]
- espnW Freshman of the Year: Sabrina Ionescu, Oregon[82]
Major coach of the year awards
[edit]- Associated Press Coach of the Year: Geno Auriemma, Connecticut[77]
- Naismith College Coach of the Year: Geno Auriemma, Connecticut[83]
- WBCA National Coach of the Year: Geno Auriemma, Connecticut[84]
Other major awards
[edit]- Nancy Lieberman Award: Kelsey Plum, Washington[85]
- WBCA Defensive Player of the Year: Gabby Williams, Connecticut[86]
- Senior CLASS Award: Sydney Wiese, Oregon State[87]
- Maggie Dixon Award (top rookie head coach): Shauna Green, Dayton[88]
- Academic All-American of the Year (top scholar-athlete): Ally Disterhoft, Iowa[89]
- Elite 90 Award (top GPA among upperclass players at Final Four): Brittany McPhee, Stanford[90]
- Pat Summitt Most Courageous Award: Angel Elderkin, head coach, Appalachian State & Holly Rowe, broadcaster, ESPN[91]
Conference standings
[edit]
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Coaching changes
[edit]Several teams changed coaches during and after the season.
Team | Former coach | Interim coach | New coach | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
Arkansas | Jimmy Dykes | Mike Neighbors | Dykes resigned at the end of his third season, finishing with a 43–49 overall record and 16–36 in the SEC, capped off with an 11-game losing streak to end this season.[93] Washington's Neighbors was hired as his replacement.[94] | |
Belmont | Cameron Newbauer | Bart Brooks | Newbauer left to fill the Florida vacancy.[95] DePaul assistant Brooks was hired as his replacement.[96] | |
Cal State Fullerton | Daron Park | Jeff Harada | Park was fired after 4 seasons in the wake of numerous allegations of misconduct with his players.[97] The school went to Division II for their next hire, tabbing Central Washington's Jeff Harada as the next head coach. | |
Davidson | Michele Savage | Gayle Coats Fulks | Savage was fired on March 8 after seven seasons.[98] The school hired Wake Forest asst. Fulks as her replacement.[99] | |
Delaware | Tina Martin | Jeanine Radice | Natasha Adair | Martin announced her Retirement on April 28. Asst. Radice was named interim coach during the school coaching search. The school would then hire Georgetown's Adair as the next head coach.[100] |
Denver | Kerry Cremeans | Jim Turgeon | Cremeans resigns on March 17. Turgeon was hired as the next coach. | |
Eastern Illinois | Debbie Black | Matt Bollant | Black was fired after 4 seasons, composing a 34-80 overall record with a 21-43 record in Ohio Valley Conference play. Former Illinois coach Bollant was hired as the next coach.[101] | |
Florida | Amanda Butler | Cameron Newbauer | Butler was fired on March 6—her 45th birthday—after 10 seasons at her alma mater. Despite being ranked by the AP in the preseason, the Gators finished with their second losing record in three seasons, and remain the only women's team on the campus that has never won a conference championship.[102] Florida hired Belmont head coach Newbauer.[95] | |
Florida Atlantic | Kellie Lewis-Jay | Jim Jabir | Lewis-Jay was fired on March 6 after five seasons and an overall 73–103 record. Jabir was hired as the next coach.[103] | |
Georgetown | Natasha Adair | James Howard | Adair left for the Delaware opening.[100] Top assistant Howard was promoted to head coach. | |
Grambling State | Nadine Domond | Freddie Murray | Domond left to take an asst. coaching position at Rutgers on July 1, 2016. Asst. coach Murray was named interim coach for 2016-17. He later had the tag removed on April 6, 2017 | |
Grand Canyon | Trent May | Milee Karre | Nicole Powell | May was fired on March 7 after 10 seasons. Top assistant Karre was named interim head coach during the search for May's successor.[104] Oregon asst. coach and former WNBA star Powell was tabbed as the next head coach.[105] |
Illinois | Matt Bollant | Nancy Fahey | Bollant was fired on March 14 after five seasons. He went 61–94 overall and 22–62 in Big Ten play, and had been sued in 2015 by seven former players who alleged racial harassment.[106] The Illini turned to Women's Basketball Hall of Fame coach Fahey from Division III Washington (MO), where she led the Bears to five national titles and 737 wins in 31 seasons.[107] | |
Illinois State | Barb Smith | Kristen Gillespie | Smith was fired on March 13 after four seasons. She inherited a program that had put together seven straight winning seasons, but the Redbirds went 28–93 during her tenure.[108] Illinois State hired Gillespie from Division II in-state school Lewis.[109] | |
Lafayette | Theresa Grentz | C.K. Calhoun | Kia Damon | Grentz was fired on April 4 after two seasons and a 10–51 overall record and 6–30 in conference play. Top assistant Calhoun was named as interim head coach during the search for Grentz' successor.[110] The school would then hire Cincinnati asst. Damon as their next head coach. |
Long Beach State | Jody Wynn | Jeff Cammon | Wynn left for the Washington opening.[111] The school hired Colorado asst. Cammon, who was previously an assistant under Wynn for 5 seasons. | |
Maine | Richard Barron | Amy Vachon | Barron was forced to take an extended medical leave on January 6 due to an as-yet-undetermined, but not life-threatening, neurological condition.[112] Vachon took over on an interim basis at that time. Her interim term was extended after the end of the season in order to allow Barron to seek further treatment and determine if he can return to coaching.[113] | |
Marshall | Matt Daniel | Tony Kemper | Daniel resigned on March 12 after five seasons, citing family reasons, specifically an opportunity to move back to his home state of Arkansas.[114] Marshall promoted top assistant Kemper to fill the vacancy.[115] | |
Mississippi Valley State | Jessica Kern | Ashley Walker | Kern left after 1 season for the Tennessee State opening. The school went to the NAIA for their next hire, tabbing Wiley College's Walker as the next coach. | |
Mount St. Mary's | Bryan Whitten | Maria Marchesano | Whitten was fired on March 22. IUPUI asso. head coach Marchesano was hired as his replacement. | |
Murray State | Rob Cross | Rechelle Turner | Cross was fired on February 27 after nine seasons. While he led the Racers to an OVC regular-season title in his first season, the Racers never finished higher than fourth in the conference during the rest of his tenure.[116] The Racers went a mere five minutes' drive for their new coach, hiring Turner after 21 seasons as head coach at their city's high school.[117] | |
Nevada | Jane Albright | Amanda Levens | Albright announced her retirement on March 1, effective at season's end, after 33 seasons as a Division I head coach and nine at Nevada.[118] The Wolf Pack hired top Arizona State assistant Levens, who had been a Nevada assistant from 2003 to 2008.[119] | |
New Mexico State | Mark Trakh | Brooke Atkinson | Trakh left for the USC vacancy.[120] Atkinson, who served as an assistant at New Mexico State from 2003 to 2011, was hired after serving as an assistant coach at Colorado State for the last three seasons. | |
North Carolina Central | Vanessa Taylor | Kendra Eaton | Trisha Stafford-Odom | Taylor was fired on March 23 after an 8–21 season and a 33–113 overall record in five seasons. The Eagles, after naming assistant Eaton as interim coach during their search for a permanent replacement, hired Stafford-Odom, a former assistant at UCLA, North Carolina, and Duke, from Division II Concordia–Irvine.[121] |
Old Dominion | Karen Barefoot | Nikki McCray | Barefoot left for the UNC Wilmington opening.[122] The school hired former WNBA All-Star McCray-Penson, who spent the last 9 seasons as an assistant under Dawn Staley at South Carolina.[123] | |
Pepperdine | Ryan Weisenberg | DeLisha Milton-Jones | Weisenberg was fired on March 8 after four seasons in which the Waves went 28–94, capped off with a 7–23 record this season. The Waves hired Milton-Jones, who joined the program as an assistant at the start of the season after 17 seasons playing in the WNBA.[124] | |
Southeastern Louisiana | Errol Gauff | Ayla Guzzardo | Gauff resign from Southeastern Louisiana on March 9. Guzzardo was hired as the next coach. | |
Tennessee State | Larry Joe Inman | Jessica Kern | Inman resigned as head coach on March 9, 2017, citing personal reasons. Mississippi Valley State coach Jessica Kern was hired as his replacement.[125] | |
UNCW | Adell Harris | Karen Barefoot | Harris resigned from UNCW on April 12, 2017 to pursue other interests. The school hired Old Dominion's Barefoot as her replacement.[122] | |
USC | Cynthia Cooper-Dyke | Mark Trakh | Cooper-Dyke resigned after the Trojans' season ended with a first-round loss in the Pac-12 Tournament on March 3. She had led the Trojans to an NCAA appearance in her first season in 2014, but the Trojans posted mediocre records in her other three seasons, ending with a 14–16 mark this season.[126] The Trojans brought back Trakh, who had been their head coach from 2004 to 2009, from New Mexico State.[120] | |
UTEP | Keitha Adams | Kevin Baker | Adams left for the Wichita State opening.[127] The school hired Baker from Division II Angelo State to be their next head coach. | |
Washington | Mike Neighbors | Jody Wynn | Neighbors left for the Arkansas opening.[94] The school hired Long Beach State's Wynn as his replacement.[128] | |
Wichita State | Jody Adams-Birch | Linda Hargrove | Keitha Adams | The Shockers parted ways with Adams-Birch on January 22 with the team at 8–10 on the season. She had been temporarily replaced by top assistant Kirk Crawford three days earlier while AD Darron Boatright reviewed the program. Following Adams-Birch's departure, former Shockers head coach Hargrove was brought back to serve for the remainder of the season.[129][130] Wichita State ultimately hired UTEP head coach Keitha Adams as the permanent replacement.[127] |
Winthrop | Kevin Cook | Lynette Woodard | The Eagles parted ways with Cook on February 24 after suspending him in January for what the school called a personnel matter. Top assistant Woodard was named interim coach during Cook's suspension,[131] and Winthrop removed the interim tag after the season.[132] |
See also
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Although Cheryl Miller, who starred at USC during the 1980s, then had more career points than either Plum or Ogwumike, she never played in the Pac-12 (or, as it was known during her career, the Pac-10). The conference did not sponsor women's sports until the 1986–87 season, the season after Miller's graduation.
- ^ Lynette Woodard finished her career at Kansas in 1981 with 3,649 points, more than Plum's final career total of 3,527. However, Woodard's entire career was in the era when women's college sports were governed by the AIAW; the NCAA did not organize women's sports until the 1981–82 season.
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- ^ "Jessica Kern hired as TSU women's basketball coach". The Tennessean. April 12, 2017. Retrieved April 12, 2017.
- ^ "Cynthia Cooper-Dyke resigns as USC women's basketball coach". ESPN.com. March 3, 2017. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
- ^ a b "Keitha Adams Named Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). Wichita State Shockers. March 29, 2017. Retrieved March 30, 2017.
- ^ "Wynn Named Washington Head Women's Basketball Coach". Washington Huskies. April 14, 2017. Retrieved April 14, 2017.
- ^ "Adams-Birch, WSU Mutually Agree to Part Ways" (Press release). Wichita State Shockers. January 22, 2017. Retrieved January 22, 2017.
- ^ "Wichita State announces coach Jody Adams-Birch won't return". ESPN.com. Associated Press. January 22, 2017. Retrieved January 22, 2017.
- ^ "Suspended Winthrop coach Kevin Cook is no longer with school". ESPN.com. Associated Press. February 24, 2017. Retrieved March 6, 2017.
- ^ "Hall of Famer Lynette Woodard named new Winthrop women's coach". ESPN.com. Associated Press. March 28, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2017.