Lone Star Conference women's basketball tournament
Lone Star Conference women's basketball tournament | |
---|---|
Conference basketball championship | |
Sport | Basketball |
Conference | Lone Star Conference |
Number of teams | 8 |
Format | Single-elimination tournament |
Played | 1983–present |
Current champion | Texas Woman's (2nd) |
Most championships | West Texas A&M (16) |
Official website | Lone Star women's basketball |
Host locations | |
Frisco, TX (2018–2020, 2022–present) Allen, TX (2012–2017) Bartlesville, OK (2008–2011) Campus Sites (1975–2011, 2021) |
The Lone Star Conference women's basketball tournament is the annual conference women's basketball championship tournament for the Lone Star Conference. The tournament has been held annually since 1983. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records.[1]
The winner receives the Lone Star Conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division II women's basketball tournament.
Results
[edit]Year | Champions | Score | Runner-up | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|
1983 | Abilene Christian | 55–53 | Texas A&I | Nacogdoches, TX |
1984 | Howard Payne | 53–51 | Sam Houston State | Commerce, TX |
1985 | Abilene Christian | 70–50 | Howard Payne | Abilene, TX |
1986 | Abilene Christian | 102–56 | Angelo State | Abilene, TX |
1987 | West Texas State | 98–60 | Abilene Christian | Canyon, TX |
1988 | West Texas State | 82–53 | Abilene Christian | Canyon, TX |
1989 | West Texas State | 72–58 | Abilene Christian | Canyon, TX |
1990 | West Texas State | 78–50 | Texas Woman's | Canyon, TX |
1991 | West Texas State | 86–52 | Eastern New Mexico | Canyon, TX |
1992 | Central Oklahoma | 87–85 | Abilene Christian | Abilene, TX |
1993 | Abilene Christian | 90–79 | Eastern New Mexico | Abilene, TX |
1994 | Angelo State | 79–69 | Abilene Christian | San Angelo, TX |
1995 | West Texas A&M | 74–68 | Abilene Christian | Canyon, TX |
1996 | Abilene Christian | 82–60 | West Texas A&M | Canyon, TX |
1997 | West Texas A&M | 59–56 | Abilene Christian | Canyon, TX |
1998 | Abilene Christian | 76–54 | Harding | Abilene, TX |
1999 | Abilene Christian | 70–57 | West Texas A&M | Canyon, TX |
2000 | Texas A&M–Kingsville | 82–67 | West Texas A&M | Kingsville, TX |
2001 | Midwestern State | 65–61 | Southeastern Oklahoma | Wichita Falls, TX |
2002 | Angelo State | 82–67 | Midwestern State | San Angelo, TX |
2003 | Northeastern State | 82–68 | West Texas A&M | Tahlequah, OK |
2004 | Angelo State | 78–63 | Northeastern State | Canyon, TX |
2005 | Angelo State | 61–49 | Northeastern State | Tahlequah, OK |
2006 | West Texas A&M | 83–68 | Angelo State | Canyon, TX |
2007 | Texas A&M–Commerce | 81–71 | West Texas A&M | Commerce, TX |
2008 | West Texas A&M | 85–73 | Central Oklahoma | Bartlesville, OK |
2009 | West Texas A&M | 66–59 | Central Oklahoma | Bartlesville, OK |
2010 | West Texas A&M | 66–59 | Northeastern State | Bartlesville, OK |
2011 | Texas Woman's | 74–73 | Central Oklahoma | Bartlesville, OK |
2012 | Tarleton State | 48–44 | Incarnate Word | Allen, TX |
2013 | Midwestern State | 85–83 (OT) | West Texas A&M | Allen, TX |
2014 | West Texas A&M | 73–67 | Tarleton State | Allen, TX |
2015 | West Texas A&M | 73–70 | Midwestern State | Allen, TX |
2016 | Angelo State | 68–65 (2OT) | West Texas A&M | Allen, TX |
2017 | Tarleton State | 80–78 | Angelo State | Allen, TX |
2018 | West Texas A&M | 80–66 | Tarleton State | Frisco, TX |
2019 | West Texas A&M | 71–55 | Angelo State | Frisco, TX |
2020 | Lubbock Christian | 57–44 | Texas A&M–Commerce | Frisco, TX |
2021 | Lubbock Christian | 78–57 | Texas A&M–Commerce | Lubbock, TX |
2022 | West Texas A&M | 67–66 | Texas A&M–Commerce | Frisco, TX |
2023 | Angelo State | 63–62 | Texas Woman's | Frisco, TX |
2024 | Texas Woman's | 70–60 | UT Permian Basin | Frisco, TX |
Championship records
[edit]School School | Finals Record | Finals Appearances | Years |
---|---|---|---|
West Texas A&M (West Texas State) | 16–7 | 23 | 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1995, 1997, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2022 |
Abilene Christian | 7–7 | 14 | 1983, 1985, 1986, 1993, 1996, 1998, 1999 |
Angelo State | 6–4 | 10 | 1994, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2016, 2023 |
Texas Woman's | 2–2 | 4 | 2011, 2024 |
Tarleton State | 2–2 | 4 | 2012, 2017 |
Midwestern State | 2–2 | 4 | 2001, 2013 |
Lubbock Christian | 2–0 | 2 | 2020, 2021 |
Texas A&M–Commerce (East Texas State; now East Texas A&M) | 1–3 | 4 | 2007 |
Northeastern State (OK) | 1–3 | 4 | 2003 |
Texas A&M–Kingsville (Texas A&I) | 1–1 | 2 | 2000 |
Central Oklahoma (Central State) | 1–3 | 4 | 1992 |
Howard Payne | 1–1 | 2 | 1984 |
Eastern New Mexico | 0–2 | 2 | |
UT Permian Basin | 0–1 | 1 | |
Sam Houston State (Sam Houston) | 0–1 | 1 | |
Harding | 0–1 | 1 | |
Southeastern Oklahoma State | 0–1 | 1 | |
Incarnate Word | 0–1 | 1 |
- Arkansas–Fort Smith, Cameron, Dallas Baptist, Oklahoma Christian, St. Edward's, St. Mary's (TX), Texas A&M International, UT Tyler, and Western New Mexico have yet to qualify for the tournament finals. Sul Ross State left the LSC in 1976, before the women's tournament was established, and did not return to the conference until the 2024–25 season.
- East Central, Ouachita Baptist, Southwest Texas State (now Texas State), Southwestern Oklahoma State, and Stephen F. Austin never qualified for the tournament finals as Lone Star Conference members.
- Schools highlighted in pink are former members of the Lone Star Conference
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "LSC Women's Basketball Tournament History" (PDF). Year-by-year records. Lone Star Conference. 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2021.