Английская Википедия:2007 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

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Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox NCAA basketball tournament

The 2007 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament began on March 17, 2007 and concluded on April 3 at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. The Final Four consisted of Tennessee, LSU, Rutgers, and North Carolina, with Tennessee defeating Rutgers 59–46 for their seventh National Title. Tennessee's Candace Parker was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.

Notable events

The Dallas Regional largely followed the seeding, with the top two seeds meeting in the regional final, and the top seed, North Carolina, winning 84–72 to move on to the Final Four, the second consecutive trip to the Final Four for the Tarheels. In the Dayton Regional, seventh-seeded Mississippi upset second-seeded Maryland, and followed that with an upset of third-seeded Oklahoma, but in the regional final faced top-seeded Tennessee, who went on to beat Mississippi by 36 points, and move on to the Final Four. This is last time Mississippi upset a top seed a feat not repeated until 2023 when 8 seeded Ole Miss upset number 1 seeded Stanford in the second round but losing to Louisville in the third round.

In the Fresno Regional, the second-seeded Stanford Cardinal fell to Florida State, who then lost to third-seeded LSU. This is last time Stanford got eliminated in the second round until 2023. The wins by Florida State over ODU and Stanford were vacated by the NCAA.[1] In the regional final, LSU easily beat Connecticut, 73–50. This was the last Final Four to not feature Connecticut until 2023. In the Greensboro Regional, neither of the top two seeds made it to the regional final. The top seed, Duke, lost a one-point game to Rutgers, while the second seed, Vanderbilt, was ousted in the second round by Bowling Green. Fourth-seeded Rutgers beat the third seed, Arizona State, by 19 points in the regional final.

The semifinal game between Tennessee and North Carolina was expected to be a high-scoring game, but it turned out to be more disorder than scoring, In a game the New York Times would describe as an "artless grind", the Tarheels held a 48–36 lead with just over eight minutes to play. They would not score another basket. The Lady Vols, who ended up hitting only 27% of the field goal attempts, went on a 20–2 run, and ended up with the win, 56–50.[2]

In the other semifinal, Rutgers faced LSU. Rutgers's appearance in a Final Four game seemed improbable earlier in the season, when the Scarlet Knights lost four of their first six games, and played so poorly that their coach C. Vivian Stringer revoked their access to their locker room. However, their play, particularly their defense, improved, and they were now a game away from a possible appearance in a national championship game, if they could defeat LSU, who had Sylvia Fowles as a dominant center. Fowles, who would go on to be the second overall WNBA draft pick the following year, had just completed a double-double against Connecticut, scoring 23 points, snaring 15 rebounds and blocking 6 shots. Rutgers held her to five points while missing eight of her ten field goal attempts. Rutgers pulled out to a 37–19 lead at halftime, and went on to win, holding LSU to 35 points, an NCAA record low in a Final Four game.[3]

In the championship game, Tennessee was too much for Rutgers. The Lady Vols had an eleven-point lead at halftime, which Rutgers cut to seven, but that was as close as they would get. Candace Parker scored 17 points,[4] but Pat Summitt noted the contribution of their 5-foot 2-inch point guard Shannon Bobbitt, who hit two key three-pointers en route to scoring 13 points of her own. Tennessee won 59–46, bringing the seventh national championship to the school, and increasing the win total of Summitt to 947, which is 33 more than Bob Knight, the most victorious coach on the men's side.[4]

Subregionals

Шаблон:Location map+ Once again, the system was the same as the Division I men's basketball tournament, with the exception that only 64 teams go and there is no play-in game. Automatic bids are secured by 31 conference champions and 33 at-large bids.

The subregionals, which once again used the "pod system", keeping most teams at or close to the home cities, were held from March 17 to 20 at these locations:

  • March 17 and 19:
Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Texas (Host: University of Texas at Austin)
Williams Arena, Minneapolis (Host: University of Minnesota, Twin Cities)
Maples Pavilion, Stanford, California (Host: Stanford University)
Galen Center, Los Angeles (Host: University of Southern California)
  • March 18 and 20:
Breslin Student Events Center, East Lansing, Michigan (Host: Michigan State University)
XL Center, Hartford, Connecticut (Host: University of Connecticut)
Petersen Events Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Host: University of Pittsburgh)
RBC Center, Raleigh, North Carolina (Host: North Carolina State University)

Regionals

Шаблон:Location map+

The regionals were held from March 24 to 27 in the following regions. The regionals, as they were in the previous two tournaments, were named after the city they were played in.

  • March 24 and 26:
Fresno Regional, Save Mart Center, Fresno, California (Host: Fresno State University)
Greensboro Regional, Greensboro Coliseum, Greensboro, North Carolina (Host: Atlantic Coast Conference)
  • March 25 and 27:
Dallas Regional, Reunion Arena, Dallas, Texas (Hosts: Conference USA and Southern Methodist University)
Dayton Regional, University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, Ohio (Host: University of Dayton)

The regional winners advanced to the Final Four, held on April 1 and 3, 2007 at Quicken Loans Arena, in Cleveland, Ohio, hosted by both Cleveland State University and the Mid-American Conference.

Tournament records

  • Three pointers—Matee Ajavon, Rutgers hit four of five three point field goals. The 80% completion ratio is tied for the best in a Final Four game.
  • Points—LSU scored 35 points in the semifinal game, the fewest points scored in a Final Four game.
  • Three pointers—Nadia Begay, Boise State, hit eight three point field goals in a first-round game against George Washington, tied for the most scored in a first or second-round game.[5]

Qualifying teams - automatic

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2007 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2007 NCAA tournament.[5]

Automatic Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
Belmont University Atlantic Sun Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 14
Boise State University WAC Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 12
Bowling Green State University MAC Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 7
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Southern Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 12
Delaware State University MEAC Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 15
Drake University Missouri Valley Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 16
East Carolina University Conference USA Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 13
Gonzaga University West Coast Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 12
University of Wisconsin–Green Bay Horizon League Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 9
Harvard University Ivy League Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 15
College of the Holy Cross Patriot League Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 16
Idaho State University Big Sky Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 15
Marist College MAAC Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 13
Middle Tennessee State University Sun Belt Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 5
University of New Mexico Mountain West Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 8
University of North Carolina ACC Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 1
University of Oklahoma Big 12 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 3
Old Dominion University Colonial Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 7
Oral Roberts University Mid-Continent Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 15
Prairie View A&M University SWAC Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 16
Purdue University Big Ten Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 2
Robert Morris University Northeast Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 13
Rutgers University Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 4
Southeast Missouri State University Ohio Valley Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 14
Stanford University Pac-10 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 2
University of Texas at Arlington Southland Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 13
University of California, Riverside Big West Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 14
University of Maryland, Baltimore County America East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 16
University of North Carolina at Asheville Big South Conference Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 14
Vanderbilt University SEC Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 2
Xavier University Atlantic 10 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 6

Qualifying teams - at-large

Thirty-three additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.[5]

At-large Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
Arizona State University Pacific-10 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 3
Baylor University Big 12 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 5
Brigham Young University Mountain West Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 11
University of California, Berkeley Pacific-10 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 8
University of Connecticut Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 1
University of Delaware Colonial Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 12
DePaul University Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 10
Duke University Atlantic Coast Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 1
Florida State University Atlantic Coast Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 10
The George Washington University Atlantic 10 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 5
University of Georgia Southeastern Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 3
Georgia Institute of Technology Atlantic Coast Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 7
Iowa State University Big 12 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 6
James Madison University Colonial Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 9
University of Louisiana at Lafayette Sun Belt Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 11
University of Louisville Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 6
Louisiana State University Southeastern Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 3
Marquette University Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 6
University of Maryland, College Park Atlantic Coast Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 2
Michigan State University Big Ten Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 5
University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) Southeastern Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 7
University of Nebraska–Lincoln Big 12 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 9
North Carolina State University Atlantic Coast Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 4
University of Notre Dame Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 9
Ohio State University Big Ten Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 4
Oklahoma State University–Stillwater Big 12 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 10
University of Pittsburgh Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 8
Texas Christian University Mountain West Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 10
Temple University Atlantic 10 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 8
University of Tennessee Southeastern Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 1
Texas A&M University Big 12 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 4
University of Washington Pacific-10 Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 11
West Virginia University Big East Шаблон:Sort Шаблон:Sort 11

Tournament seeds

Dallas Regional Reunion Arena, Dallas, Texas
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 North Carolina ACC 30-3 Automatic
2 Purdue Big Ten 28-5 Automatic
3 Georgia SEC 25-6 At-large
4 Texas A&M Big 12 24-6 At-large
5 George Washington Atlantic 10 26-3 At-large
6 Iowa State Big 12 25-8 At-large
7 Georgia Tech ACC 20-11 At-large
8 California Pac-10 23-8 At-large
9 Notre Dame Big East 19-11 At-large
10 DePaul Big East 19-12 At-large
11 Washington Pac-10 18-12 At-large
12 Boise State WAC 24-8 Automatic
13 Texas-Arlington Southland 24-8 Automatic
14 Belmont Atlantic Sun 25-6 Automatic
15 Oral Roberts Mid-Continent 22-10 Automatic
16 Prairie View A&M SWAC 19-13 Automatic
Dayton Regional University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, Ohio
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Tennessee SEC 28-3 At-large
2 Maryland ACC 27-5 At-large
3 Oklahoma Big 12 26-4 Automatic
4 Ohio State Big Ten 28-3 At-large
5 Middle Tennessee State Sun Belt 29-3 Automatic
6 Marquette Big East 25-6 At-large
7 Ole Miss SEC 21-10 At-large
8 Pittsburgh Big East 23-8 At-large
9 James Madison CAA 27-5 At-large
10 TCU Mountain West 21-10 At-large
11 Louisiana-Lafayette Sun Belt 25-8 At-large
12 Gonzaga West Coast 24-9 Automatic
13 Marist MAAC 27-5 Automatic
14 Southeast Missouri State Ohio Valley 24-7 Automatic
15 Harvard Ivy 15-12 Automatic
16 Drake Missouri Valley 14-18 Automatic
Fresno Regional Save Mart Center, Fresno, California
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Connecticut Big East 29-3 At-large
2 Stanford Pac-10 28-4 Automatic
3 LSU SEC 26-7 At-large
4 NC State ACC 23-9 At-large
5 Baylor Big 12 25-7 At-large
6 Xavier Atlantic 10 26-7 Automatic
7 Old Dominion CAA 24-8 Automatic
8 New Mexico Mountain West 24-8 Automatic
9 Wisconsin-Green Bay Horizon 28-3 Automatic
10 Florida State ACC 22-9 At-large
11 West Virginia Big East 20-10 At-large
12 Chattanooga Southern 25-7 Automatic
13 Robert Morris Northeast 24-7 Automatic
14 UNC-Asheville Big South 21-11 Automatic
15 Idaho State Big Sky 17-13 Automatic
16 UMBC America East 16-16 Automatic
Greensboro Regional Greensboro Coliseum, Greensboro, North Carolina
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Duke ACC 30-1 At-large
2 Vanderbilt SEC 27-5 Automatic
3 Arizona State Pac-10 28-4 At-large
4 Rutgers Big East 22-8 Automatic
5 Michigan State Big Ten 23-8 At-large
6 Louisville Big East 26-7 At-large
7 Bowling Green MAC 29-3 Automatic
8 Temple Atlantic 10 24-7 At-large
9 Nebraska Big 12 22-9 At-large
10 Oklahoma State Big 12 20-10 At-large
11 BYU Mountain West 23-9 At-large
12 Delaware CAA 26-5 At-large
13 East Carolina Conference USA 19-13 Automatic
14 UC Riverside Big West 21-10 Automatic
15 Delaware State MEAC 20-12 Automatic
16 Holy Cross Patriot 15-17 Automatic

Bids by conference

Thirty-one conferences earned an automatic bid. In twenty-one cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-three additional at-large teams were selected from ten of the conferences.[5]

Bids Conference Teams
8 Big East Rutgers, Connecticut, DePaul, Louisville, Marquette, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, West Virginia
6 Atlantic Coast North Carolina, Duke, Florida St., Georgia Tech, Maryland, North Carolina St.
6 Big 12 Oklahoma, Baylor, Iowa St., Nebraska, Oklahoma St., Texas A&M
5 Southeastern Vanderbilt, Georgia, LSU, Ole Miss, Tennessee
4 Pacific-10 Stanford, Arizona St., California, Washington
3 Atlantic 10 Xavier, George Washington, Temple
3 Big Ten Purdue, Michigan St., Ohio St.
3 Colonial Old Dominion, Delaware, James Madison
3 Mountain West New Mexico, BYU, TCU
2 Sun Belt Middle Tenn., La.-Lafayette
1 America East UMBC
1 Atlantic Sun Belmont
1 Big Sky Idaho St.
1 Big South UNC Asheville
1 Big West UC Riverside
1 Conference USA East Carolina
1 Horizon Green Bay
1 Ivy Harvard
1 Metro Atlantic Marist
1 Mid-American Bowling Green
1 Mid-Continent Oral Roberts
1 Mid-Eastern Delaware St.
1 Missouri Valley Drake
1 Northeast Robert Morris
1 Ohio Valley Southeast Mo. St.
1 Patriot Holy Cross
1 Southern Chattanooga
1 Southland Texas-Arlington
1 Southwestern Prairie View
1 West Coast Gonzaga
1 Western Athletic Boise St.

Bids by state

The sixty-four teams came from thirty-one states, plus Washington, D.C. Texas, Tennessee, and North Carolina had the most teams with five bids each. Nineteen states did not have any teams receiving bids.[5]

Файл:NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2007.svg
NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2007
Bids State Teams
5 North Carolina East Carolina, North Carolina, UNC Asheville, Duke, North Carolina St.
5 Tennessee Belmont, Chattanooga, Middle Tenn., Vanderbilt, Tennessee
5 Texas Prairie View, Texas-Arlington, Baylor, TCU, Texas A&M
3 California Stanford, UC Riverside, California
3 Ohio Bowling Green, Xavier, Ohio St.
3 Oklahoma Oklahoma, Oral Roberts, Oklahoma St.
3 Pennsylvania Robert Morris, Pittsburgh, Temple
2 Delaware Delaware St., Delaware
2 Florida Southeast Mo. St., Florida St.
2 Georgia Georgia, Georgia Tech
2 Idaho Boise St., Idaho St.
2 Indiana Purdue, Notre Dame
2 Iowa Drake, Iowa St.
2 Louisiana La.-Lafayette, LSU
2 Maryland UMBC, Maryland
2 Massachusetts Harvard, Holy Cross
2 Virginia Old Dominion, James Madison
2 Washington Gonzaga, Washington
2 Wisconsin Green Bay, Marquette
1 Arizona Arizona St.
1 Connecticut Connecticut
1 District of Columbia George Washington
1 Illinois DePaul
1 Kentucky Louisville
1 Michigan Michigan St.
1 Mississippi Ole Miss
1 Nebraska Nebraska
1 New Jersey Rutgers
1 New Mexico New Mexico
1 New York Marist
1 Utah BYU
1 West Virginia West Virginia

Brackets

Data source[6]

(*) – Number of asterisks denotes number of overtimes.

Dallas Regional

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

Dayton Regional

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

Fresno Regional

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

Greensboro Regional

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

Final Four – Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland, Ohio

Шаблон:4TeamBracket

Regional Initials: DAL-Dallas; DAY-Dayton; FRE-Fresno; GRE-Greensboro.

Television and radio

As it had every year since 2003, ESPN and ESPN2 televised all 63 games. The first two rounds were presented on a regional basis. In some cases, a complete game of interest to a particular region were shown. However, most of the telecasts were in a "whip-around" format, with the specific game being shown changed on occasion and the endings to all close games or potential major upsets included.[1] [2][3][4] All games not shown on either ESPN or ESPN2 in a local market area were available to subscribers of ESPN Full Court, a pay-per-view package available on most major cable and satellite providers. Select games were also simulcast on ESPNU and ESPN360.

All games from the regional semifinals forward were televised nationally on either ESPN or ESPN2, in both standard-definition and high-definition formats. The Final Four was on ESPN. In addition, the championship game was presented in the ESPN Full Circle format.

ESPN had three announcers at each site: a play-by-play announcer, a color commentator, and a sideline reporter. (In contrast, CBS Sports, which covers nearly every game of the men's tournament, did not use sideline reporters until the Final Four.) Mike Patrick, Doris Burke, Holly Rowe and Mark Jones had those respective roles at the Final Four site in Cleveland. Patrick, Burke and Rowe also covered the Greensboro regional.

Burke, who had been a sideline reporter at previous Final Fours, replaced Ann Meyers, who had that role for the last ten years. Meyers is now the general manager of the Phoenix Mercury of the WNBA.

Other regional broadcast teams were:

Some of the other ESPN commentators during earlier rounds included Linda Cohn, Dave Revsine, Dave Barnett, Fran Fraschilla, and Van Chancellor.

Trey Wingo was the studio host, with analysts Kara Lawson and Stacey Dales.

Mowins and Debbie Antonelli called the Final Four action on Westwood One radio.

Comments

  • Judy Southard, an athletics administrator at Louisiana State University, is the head of the Division I Women's Basketball Committee, which selected and seeded the teams for this event. Southard carried on her duties despite an ongoing scandal in which the head women's basketball coach, Pokey Chatman, resigned after it was alleged that she had an inappropriate sexual relationship with one of her former players. When asked about the scandal on the ESPN program announcing the tournament field and matchups, Southard declined to comment, saying that she wanted the focus to be on the players and teams in the tourney. Assistant coach Bob Starkey was named interim head coach and guided the Tigers to their fourth consecutive Final Four.
  • This was the first tournament since the NCAA began sanctioning women's basketball in which Louisiana Tech is not a participant. This leaves Tennessee as the only program to appear in all 26 events.
  • Texas was not in the tournament in consecutive seasons for the first time in its history. (At about the same moment that the selections were announced, Jody Conradt, who won 900 games and a championship during her tenure, resigned as the team's head coach.)
  • Marist College was the first current MAAC participant to win in the NCAA tournament. The MAAC was previously 0–21 in the tournament under its current membership. Marist also matched the record for the lowest seed to advance to the Sweet Sixteen as a 13 seed. Texas A&M did so in 1994 and Liberty also accomplished this in 2005.
  • The Bowling Green State University Falcons became the first team from the Mid American Conference to reach the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament, after they upset the second seed Vanderbilt 59–56 at the Breslin Student Events Center in East Lansing, Michigan in 2007.
  • The Final Four logo features a guitar that resembles the Fender Stratocaster, marking the fact that Cleveland serves as the home of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Also, the opening teases on the ESPN telecasts featured an actress playing a disc jockey and mock-up vinyl album covers with players and coaches pictured, to further advance the theme. At the Final Four, a picture of a guitar was applied onto the playing surface with a wood finish, and ESPN used classic rock and roll and R&B songs to lead out into some of the commercial breaks.
  • Rutgers' Cinderella performance in the NCAA tournament was the indirect catalyst of a chain of events that led to CBS Radio firing nationally syndicated radio host Don Imus and to a car accident that nearly killed New Jersey governor Jon Corzine. After their underdog performance, Imus mentioned the Rutgers women's basketball team in his radio program, where he referred to the team as "nappy-headed hos", which resulted in his radio show being canceled by CBS Radio and MSNBC on April 12, 2007. In an attempt to apologize to the Rutgers' basketball team, Don Imus apologized to the Rutgers team in person at the New Jersey governor's mansion in Princeton, New Jersey. The meeting was also to be attended by Corzine, but on his way to the meeting, he was involved in an auto accident that left him in critical condition.

Record by conference

Conference # of Bids Record Win % Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Big East 8 13–8 .619 7 2 2 1 1
Atlantic Coast 6 12–6 .667 6 4 1 1 0
Big 12 6 5–6 .455 4 1 0 0 0
Southeastern 5 16–4 .800 5 4 3 2 1
Pacific-10 4 4–4 .500 2 1 1 0 0
Big Ten 3 4–3 .571 2 1 1 0 0
Atlantic 10 3 3–3 .500 2 1 0 0 0
Colonial 3 0–3 .000 0 0 0 0 0
Mountain West 3 0–3 .000 0 0 0 0 0
Sun Belt 2 1–2 .333 1 0 0 0 0
Metro Atlantic 1 2–1 .667 1 1 0 0 0
Mid-American 1 2–1 .667 1 1 0 0 0
Horizon 1 1–1 .500 1 0 0 0 0

Eighteen conferences went 0-1: America East, Atlantic Sun Conference, Big Sky Conference, Big South Conference, Big West Conference, Conference USA, Ivy League, Mid-Continent, MEAC, Missouri Valley Conference, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southern Conference, Southland, SWAC, West Coast Conference, and WAC

All-Tournament Team

Game Officials

  • Bob Trammell (semifinal)
  • Clarke Stevens (semifinal)
  • Eric Brewton (semifinal)
  • Dee Kantner (semifinal)
  • Denise Brooks-Clauser (semifinal)
  • Mary Day (semifinal)
  • Lisa Mattingly (final)
  • Michael Price (final)
  • Tina Napier (final) [5]

See also

Notes

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament Шаблон:2007 Tennessee Lady Volunteers basketball navbox

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