Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

ASUN women's basketball tournament

American college basketball tournament


Summary

American college basketball tournament

FieldValue
nameASUN women's basketball tournament
optional_subheaderConference basketball championship
sportBasketball
conferenceASUN Conference
formatSingle-elimination tournament
current_stadiumCampus sites
years1986–1991 (as NSWAC Tournament)
1992–2001 (as TAAC Tournament)
2002–present (as ASUN Tournament)
most_recent2025
current_championFlorida Gulf Coast
most_championshipsFGCU (12)
websiteasunsports.org
all_stadiums
all_locations

The ASUN women's basketball tournament is a postseason tournament that determines which team receives the ASUN Conference's automatic bid into the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament.

The tournament was first held in 1986 by the New South Women's Athletic Conference, a women-only Division I conference. Following the 1990–91 basketball season, the NSWAC was absorbed by the Trans America Athletic Conference, with the TAAC incorporating all NSWAC statistics and records as its own. The conference changed its name to Atlantic Sun Conference in 2002, and rebranded itself as the ASUN Conference in 2016.

History

For most of its history, the tournament was held at predetermined campus sites, a tradition which started with the inception of the women's tournament. From 2004–07, the tournament was played regularly at the Dothan Civic Center in Dothan, Alabama, though then-conference member Troy was the official host in 2004–05, and the city of Dothan was the host in 2006–07, after Troy had departed for the Sun Belt Conference. Starting in 2008, the tournament moved yet again, this time to Nashville, Tennessee, hosted by Lipscomb. In 2010, the tourney was moved to Macon, Georgia and was hosted by Mercer University through 2013. It then moved to Alico Arena on the campus of Florida Gulf Coast University near Fort Myers, Florida for two seasons. The 2016 tournament began a new era for the event, with all games being held at campus sites. Since then, all games have been hosted by the higher seed of the teams involved, except for the 2021 edition. With the 2020–21 season dramatically affected by COVID-19, the ASUN chose to move its entire tournament to the campus of Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia.

Results

Atlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"YearAtlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"ChampionAtlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"ScoreAtlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"Runner-upAtlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"LocationASUN Conferencecolor=white}} colspan=5New South Women's Athletic ConferenceASUN Conferencecolor=white}} colspan=5Trans America Athletic ConferenceASUN Conferencecolor=white}} colspan=5Atlantic Sun ConferenceASUN Conferencecolor=white}} colspan=5ASUN Conference
1986Florida A&M (1)68–54Georgia SouthernGaither Gym, Tallahassee, Florida
1987Georgia Southern (1)74–69Florida A&MHanner Fieldhouse, Statesboro, Georgia
1988Georgia Southern (2)73–66Florida A&MEdmunds Center, DeLand, Florida
1989Stetson (1)72–65Georgia SouthernGSU Sports Arena, Atlanta, Georgia
1990Georgia Southern (3)71–70FIUGolden Panther Arena, Miami, Florida
1991Miami (FL) (1)73–44Florida A&MGaither Gym, Tallahassee, Florida
1992FIU (1)88–78Georgia SouthernHanner Fieldhouse, Statesboro, Georgia
1993FIU (2)77–52MercerGolden Panther Arena, Miami, Florida
1994FIU (3)89–67Southeastern LouisianaUniversity Center, Hammond, Louisiana
1995FIU (4)76–74Southeastern LouisianaJohn Kresse Arena, Charleston, South Carolina
1996Central Florida (1)81–57Florida AtlanticUniversity Center, Hammond, Louisiana
1997FIU (5)91–71Jacksonville StateEdmunds Center, DeLand, Florida
1998FIU (6)86–50Georgia StateGolden Panther Arena, Miami, Florida
1999Central Florida (2)80–59Jacksonville StateGSU Sports Arena, Atlanta, Georgia
2000Campbell (1)66–49Georgia StatePelham Civic Center, Pelham, Alabama
2001Georgia State (1)64–62CampbellUCF Arena, Orlando, Florida
2002Georgia State (2)64–63Florida AtlanticTrojan Arena, Troy, AL
2003Georgia State (3)80–63Central FloridaUCF Arena, Orlando, Florida
2004Lipscomb (1)64–62Central FloridaDothan Civic Center, Dothan, Alabama
2005Stetson (2)88–62Georgia State
2006Florida Atlantic (1)88–62Gardner–Webb
2007Belmont (1)69–57East Tennessee State
2008East Tennessee State (1)72–72JacksonvilleAllen Arena, Nashville, Tennessee
2009East Tennessee State (2)58–52Jacksonville
2010East Tennessee State (3)63–62North FloridaUniversity Center, Macon, Georgia
2011Stetson (3)69–50Jacksonville
2012Florida Gulf Coast (1)67–39Stetson
2013Stetson (4)70–64Stetson
2014Florida Gulf Coast (2)72–70StetsonAlico Arena, Fort Myers, Florida
2015Florida Gulf Coast (3)60–43Northern Kentucky
2016Jacksonville (1)56–54Florida Gulf Coast
2017Florida Gulf Coast (4)77–70StetsonEdmunds Center, DeLand, Florida
2018Florida Gulf Coast (5)68–58JacksonvilleAlico Arena, Fort Myers, Florida
2019Florida Gulf Coast (6)72–49Liberty
2020Tournament canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021Florida Gulf Coast (7)84–62LibertyKSU Convocation Center, Kennesaw, Georgia
2022Florida Gulf Coast (8)69–54Jacksonville StateCampus sites
2023Florida Gulf Coast (9)84–60Liberty
2024Florida Gulf Coast (10)76–47Central Arkansas
2025Florida Gulf Coast (11)68–51Central Arkansas

Champions

Atlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"SchoolAtlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"ChampionshipsAtlantic Sun Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"Championships Years
Florida Gulf Coast2012, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020Co, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025
FIU1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998
Stetson1989, 2005, 2011, 2013
East Tennessee State2008, 2009, 2010
Georgia State2001, 2002, 2003
Georgia Southern1987, 1988, 1990
UCF1996, 1999
Jacksonville2016
Belmont2007
Lipscomb2004
Campbell2000
Florida Atlantic2006
Miami (FL)1991
Florida A&M1986
Liberty2020Co
  • Austin Peay, Bellarmine, Central Arkansas, Eastern Kentucky, North Alabama, North Florida, and Queens (NC) have not yet won an ASUN tournament.
  • Centenary (LA), Charleston, Gardner–Webb, Kennesaw State, Mercer, Northern Kentucky, NJIT, Samford, Southeastern Louisiana, Troy, and USC Upstate never won the tournament as a ASUN members.
  • Schools highlighted in pink are former members of the ASUN as of the 2023–24 season.

References

References

  1. "ASUN Conference Women’s Basketball Record Book".
  2. FGCU, Liberty, semi-finalists, named as co-champions of tournament
  3. Carmany, Paul. (2020-09-25). "Lady Flames Announce Revamped 2020-21 ASUN WBB Schedule".
  4. (2021-03-14). "No. 21 FGCU Defeats Liberty to Capture the 2021 #ASUNMadness Championship".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about ASUN women's basketball tournament — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report