Penn State, Villanova among top seeds in new Women's Basketball Invitational Tournament

Drexel women's basketball team to face Texas in NCAA Tournament

Penn State, Villanova, James Madison and Washington State will play in the inaugural Women's Basketball Invitational Tournament as the No. 1 seeds after just missing the NCAA Tournament.

The NCAA is sponsoring the tournament, an equivalent to the men's NIT. In the past, the secondary women's tournament was the WNIT and teams had to pay to host games in it. The NCAA is footing the bill for teams in the new tournament.

"What a great opportunity for women's college basketball with (an) additional 32 NCAA teams having the ability extend their season with a new NCAA postseason tournament," said WBIT committee chair Barbara Burke, a former AD at Iowa. "This inaugural selection process was a great experience for our committee and as a group we want to commend and thank the NCAA for this new endeavor for women's sports."

The WBIT committee seeded the top half of the 32-team field while the remaining 16 teams were placed into the bracket by the selection committee as close to their area of natural interest as possible.

All games will be played on campus sites until the Final Four. The first round is scheduled for Thursday, March 21, with the second round three days later. The quarterfinals will be held on March 28. Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis will host the Final Four on April 1, with the championship game two days later.

Penn State will host George Mason Thursday at the Bryce Jordan Center, and Villanova takes on Virginia Commonwealth University at Finneran Pavilion in the first round.

Three other teams from the Big East joined Villanova: conference tournament runner-up Georgetown, Seton Hall and St. John's. California and Washington are with Washington State from the Pac-12. Arkansas, Florida and Mississippi State gave the SEC three as well.

Georgia Tech and Virginia are representing the ACC. Miami was supposed to be a No. 1 seed, but declined an invitation to the tournament. James Madison moved in and took the Hurricanes' top spot.

Read more
f

We and our partners use cookies to understand how you use our site, improve your experience and serve you personalized content and advertising. Read about how we use cookies in our cookie policy and how you can control them by clicking Manage Settings. By continuing to use this site, you accept these cookies.