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Big Ten women's basketball tournament

Annual college basketball tournament


Annual college basketball tournament

FieldValue
nameBig Ten Conference women's basketball tournament
sportCollege basketball
conferenceBig Ten Conference
number_of_teams15
formatSingle-elimination tournament
current_stadiumGainbridge Fieldhouse
current_locationIndianapolis, Indiana
years1995–present
most_recent2025
current_championUCLA Bruins
most_championshipsPurdue Boilermakers (9)
televisionPeacock (first round)
Big Ten Network (second round, third round and semifinals)
CBS (championship)
websitebigten.org Women's Basketball
all_stadiums
all_locations

Big Ten Network (second round, third round and semifinals) CBS (championship) The Big Ten Conference women's basketball tournament is held annually at the end of the women's college basketball regular season in the United States. The tournament has been played each year since 1995. The winner of the tournament is designated the Big Ten Tournament Champion, and receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA women's basketball tournament. The tournament is typically held the first week of March with games played Wednesday through Sunday.

The Big Ten did not begin sponsoring women's basketball until the 1982–83 basketball season. In February 1982 during the 1981–82 season, the conference held a tournament at Michigan State in which Ohio State defeated Illinois 69–66 in the championship game. The conference has listed this in some publications as a regular season championship.

Maryland and Rutgers joined the Big Ten Conference for the 2014–15 season, bringing the conference to 14 teams. The 2015 Big Ten Conference tournament was the first for each school, with Maryland winning its first tournament title in its debut season.

The Big Ten expanded to 18 teams for the 2024–25 season with the arrival of Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington.

Originally, Big Ten Network broadcast the first round, second round, quarterfinals and semifinals of the tournament, with the championship game on the ESPN family of networks. Starting in 2024, the first round will air on Peacock and the final will air on CBS.

Results

Big Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"YearBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"ChampionBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"ScoreBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"Runner-upBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"Most Outstanding PlayerBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"Location
1995Penn State68–63Ohio StateMissy Masley, Penn StateHinkle Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
1996Penn State71–69PurdueAngie Potthoff, Penn State
1997Iowa63–56IllinoisAngela Hamblin, IowaRCA Dome, Indianapolis, Indiana
1998Purdue59–49Penn StateAndrea Garner, Penn State
1999Purdue80–76IllinoisStephanie White, Purdue
2000Purdue71–63Penn StateHelen Darling, Penn StateConseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
2001Iowa75–70PurdueCara Consuegra, IowaVan Andel Arena, Grand Rapids, Michigan
2002Indiana75–72Penn StateHeather Cassady, IndianaConseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
2003Purdue67–65Ohio StateShereka Wright, Purdue
2004Purdue59–58Penn StateShereka Wright, Purdue
2005Michigan State55–49MinnesotaKristin Haynie, Michigan State
2006Ohio State63–60PurdueBrandie Hoskins, Ohio State
2007Purdue64–52Ohio StateKatie Gearlds, Purdue
2008Purdue58–56IllinoisFahKara Malone, Purdue
2009Ohio State67–66PurdueJantel Lavender, Ohio State
2010Ohio State66–64IowaJantel Lavender, Ohio State
2011Ohio State84–70Penn StateJantel Lavender, Ohio State
2012Purdue74–70NebraskaBrittany Rayburn, PurdueBankers Life Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
2013Purdue62–47Michigan StateDrey Mingo, PurdueSears Centre, Hoffman Estates, Illinois
2014Nebraska72–65IowaRachel Theriot, NebraskaBankers Life Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
2015Maryland77–74Ohio StateLexie Brown, MarylandSears Centre, Hoffman Estates, Illinois
2016Maryland60–44Michigan StateShatori Walker-Kimbrough, MarylandBankers Life Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
2017Maryland74–64PurdueBrionna Jones, Maryland
2018Ohio State79–69MarylandKelsey Mitchell, Ohio State
2019Iowa90–76MarylandMegan Gustafson, Iowa
2020Maryland82–65Ohio StateAshley Owusu, Maryland
2021Maryland104–84IowaDiamond Miller, Maryland
2022Iowa74–67IndianaCaitlin Clark, IowaGainbridge Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
2023Iowa105–72Ohio StateCaitlin Clark, IowaTarget Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota
2024Iowa94–89OTNebraskaCaitlin Clark, Iowa
2025UCLA72–67USCLauren Betts, UCLAGainbridge Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana
2026
2027T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada
2028Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, Michigan

Championship game results by school

Big Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"AppearancesBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"SchoolBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"WinsBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"LossesBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"Last ChampionshipBig Ten Conferenceborder=1color=#ffffff}}"Last Appearance
3Illinois03N/A2008
2Indiana1120022022
8Iowa6220242024
7Maryland5220212021
3Michigan State1220052016
1Minnesota01N/A2005
3Nebraska1220142024
11Ohio State5620182023
7Penn State2519962011
14Purdue9520132017
1UCLA1020252025
1USC01N/A2025
  • Michigan, Northwestern, Oregon, Rutgers, Washington and Wisconsin have not made an appearance in a championship game.
  • Ohio State's 2018 championship was later vacated by the NCAA due to sanctions imposed for impermissible benefits provided by an assistant coach.

References

References

  1. "BIG TEN CONFERENCE ANNOUNCES GROUNDBREAKING MEDIA RIGHTS AGREEMENTS PROVIDING FANS UNPRECEDENTED ACCESS AND STUDENT-ATHLETES GREATER EXPOSURE THAN ANY OTHER COLLEGIATE SPORTS CONFERENCE IN HISTORY".
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