2015 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament

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2015 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament
2015 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament Logo.svg
Tournament Logo
ClassificationDivision I
Season2014–15
Teams11
SiteMohegan Sun Arena
Uncasville, Connecticut
ChampionsConnecticut (2nd title)
Winning coachGeno Auriemma (2nd title)
MVPKaleena Mosqueda-Lewis (Connecticut)
Attendance29,553
TelevisionESPN, ESPNU, ESPN3
← 2014
2016 →
2014–15 American Athletic Conference women's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 1 UConn 18 0   1.000 38 1   .974
No. 25 South Florida 15 3   .833 27 8   .771
Tulsa 12 6   .667 18 14   .563
Temple 12 6   .667 20 17   .541
East Carolina 11 7   .611 22 11   .667
Tulane 11 7   .611 22 11   .667
Memphis 7 11   .389 14 17   .452
UCF 5 13   .278 9 21   .300
Cincinnati 4 14   .222 8 23   .258
SMU 3 15   .167 7 23   .233
Houston 1 17   .056 6 24   .200
American Tournament winner winner
As of 7 April 2015; Rankings from AP Poll

The 2015 American Athletic Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was an postseason women's tournament was held from March 6–9, 2015 in the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut and will decide the champion of the . The teams in the conference will compete in an eleven team single elimination tournament with the addition of Tulsa and Tulane for an automatic bid to the 2015 NCAA Tournament. UConn beat South Florida in the final 84–70 to win its second straight AAC Tournament Championship.

Seeds[]

All the teams in the American Athletic Conference will qualify for the tournament. Teams are seeded based on conference record and then a tie breaker system is used. Teams seeded 6-11 will have to play in the opening round and teams seeded 1-5 receive a bye to the quarterfinals.

Seed School Conf (Overall) Tiebreaker
1 Connecticut 18–0 (29–1)
2 South Florida 15–3 (24–6)
3 Tulsa 12–6 (17–12) 1–0 vs. Temple
4 Temple 12–6 (15–14) 0–1 vs. Tulsa
5 East Carolina 11–7 (20–9) 1–1 vs. South Florida
6 Tulane 11–7 (20–9) 0–2 vs. South Florida
7 Memphis 7–11 (13–16)
8 UCF 5–13 (9–20)
9 Cincinnati 4–14 (7–22)
10 SMU 3–15 (7–22)
11 Houston 1–17 (6–22)
‡ – American Athletic Conference regular season champions.
# – Received a first-round bye in the conference tournament.
Overall record are as of the end of the regular season.

Schedule[]

All tournament games are nationally televised on an ESPN network:

Session Game Time* Matchup# Television Attendance
First Round – Friday, March 6
1 1 4:00 PM #8 UCF vs. #9 Cincinnati ESPN3 4,669
2 6:00 PM #7 Memphis vs. #10 SMU
3 8:00 PM #6 Tulane vs. #11 Houston
Quarterfinals – Saturday, March 7
2 4 12:00 PM #4 Temple vs. #5 East Carolina ESPN3 6,677
5 2:00 PM #1 Connecticut vs. #9 Cincinnati
3 6 6:00 PM #2 South Florida vs. #7 Memphis 5,177
7 8:00 PM #3 Tulsa vs. #6 Tulane
Semifinals – Sunday, March 8
4 8 5:30 PM #5 East Carolina vs. #1 Connecticut ESPNU 6,531
9 7:30 PM #2 South Florida vs. #6 Tulane
Championship Game – Monday, March 9
5 10 7:00 PM #1 Connecticut vs. #2 South Florida ESPN 6,499
*Game Times in EST. #-Rankings denote tournament seeding.

Bracket[]

First Round
Friday, March 6
Quarterfinals
Saturday, March 7
Semifinals
Sunday, March 8
Championship Game
Monday, March 9
            
1 Connecticut 93
9 Cincinnati 34
8 UCF 66
9 Cincinnati 76
1 Connecticut 106
5 East Carolina 56
4 Temple 71
5 East Carolina 77
1 Connecticut 84
2 South Florida 70
2 South Florida 79
7 Memphis 51
7 Memphis 71
10 SMU 59
2 South Florida 78
6 Tulane 69
3 Tulsa 53
6 Tulane 71
6 Tulane 64
11 Houston 39

References[]

Retrieved from ""