LSU - Femenino

LSU - Femenino

Leagues Played
WNCAAB 225
Links
Wikipedia
Related Teams
LSU

Resultados

WNCAAB 04/01 23:15 138 LSU - Femenino v Iowa - Femenino L 87-94
WNCAAB 03/30 17:00 136 LSU - Femenino v UCLA - Femenino W 78-69
WNCAAB 03/24 19:00 124 Middle Tennessee - Femenino v LSU - Femenino W 56-83
WNCAAB 03/22 20:10 122 Rice - Femenino v LSU - Femenino W 60-70
WNCAAB 03/10 19:00 1 [11] LSU - Femenino v Carolina del Sur - Femenino [1] L 72-79
WNCAAB 03/10 00:00 2 [55] Mississippi - Femenino v LSU - Femenino [11] W 67-75
WNCAAB 03/08 23:00 3 [87] Auburn - Femenino v LSU - Femenino [9] W 48-78
WNCAAB 03/03 19:00 - [261] Kentucky - Femenino v LSU - Femenino [14] W 56-77
WNCAAB 03/01 02:00 - [15] LSU - Femenino v Georgia - Femenino [220] W 80-54
WNCAAB 02/25 17:00 - [15] LSU - Femenino v Tennessee - Femenino [109] W 75-60
WNCAAB 02/23 02:00 - [109] Auburn - Femenino v LSU - Femenino [19] W 66-71
WNCAAB 02/20 00:00 - [24] LSU - Femenino v Texas A&M - Femenino [72] W 81-58

The LSU Tigers women's basketball team represents Louisiana State University in NCAA Division I women's college basketball. The team’s head coach is Kim Mulkey, the former head coach at Baylor University, who was hired on April 25, 2021 to replace Nikki Fargas, who had been head coach since the 2011–2012 season. The team plays its home games in the Pete Maravich Assembly Center located on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

LSU is the 2023 NCAA national champion, having defeated Iowa 102–85 in the national championship game.

History

Through the 2018–2019 season, LSU has made 27 AIAW/NCAA tournament appearances including 14 Sweet Sixteens, eight Elite Eights, and six Final Fours. The Lady Tigers have won the SEC regular season championship three times and the SEC Tournament championship twice.

Coleman-Swanner era

The LSU women's basketball team started play in 1975 as the "Ben-Gals," with coach Jinks Coleman. In just their second season of play, the team made it to the AIAW national championship game before losing to top-ranked Delta State, 68–55. Coleman stepped down in the middle of the 1978–1979 season and was replaced by Barbara Swanner, who in turn led the team for three and a half seasons. The 1981-1982 season saw the NCAA become the governing body of collegiate women's basketball. LSU did not play in the first NCAA tournament.

Sue Gunter era

Future Hall of Fame coach Sue Gunter was hired to replace Swanner. Gunter would lead the Lady Tigers for the next 22 seasons. Gunter led the Lady Tigers to 14 NCAA tournament appearances. Although she only won three regular season titles, for most of her tenure the SEC was dominated by national powers Tennessee, Auburn and Ole Miss. Gunter took a medical leave of absence in the middle of the 2003–04 season. Her top assistant, Pokey Chatman, who had played for Gunter in the late 1980s and early 1990s and served as an assistant coach since the end of her playing days, took over as interim coach and led the Tigers to their first Final Four. However, Gunter was still officially head coach, and LSU credits the entire season to her. Gunter retired after the season, and Chatman was named her permanent successor.

Pokey Chatman era

Pokey Chatman led the team to two more consecutive Final Four appearances and was highly regarded as coach. However, during the 2006–2007 season, just prior to the NCAA Tournament, Chatman resigned after allegations of improper conduct with a former player surfaced. She was replaced on an interim basis by longtime assistant Bob Starkey, who coached the team during the 2007 NCAA tournament, leading them to a fourth consecutive Final Four.

Van Chancellor era (2006–2011)

Van Chancellor, the former head coach for Ole Miss and the Houston Comets, was hired at the end of the 2006–2007 season as a permanent replacement. In his first year as coach, Chancellor led the Lady Tigers to the SEC regular season championship. The Lady Tigers were runner-up in the 2008 SEC women's basketball tournament and made the NCAA Final Four for a fifth consecutive year. LSU joined UConn as the only two schools ever to reach five consecutive Final Fours.

LSU NCAAW has officially beat 150/153 teams as of 2023.

Kim Mulkey era (2021–present)

On April 25, 2021, LSU announced the signing of Kim Mulkey to replace Fargas as head coach. Mulkey played at Louisiana Tech, where she also went on to be an assistant and associate head coach for 15 years. Prior to accepting the offer to coach LSU, she was the head coach for Baylor University, where she won three national championships in 21 seasons.

On December 2, 2021, Mulkey led the team to their first win versus a ranked team by defeating #14 Iowa State 69-60 in the Maravich Center giving the team a 7-1 record for the year.

On April 2, 2023, LSU would defeat the Iowa Hawkeyes, by the score of 102-85, to win their first ever national championship; the game also marked the highest scoring championship game in women's NCAA history.

El equipo de baloncesto femenino de la Universidad Estatal de Luisiana (LSU), también conocido como las Lady Tigers, es un equipo de baloncesto universitario que representa a la Universidad Estatal de Luisiana en la Southeastern Conference (SEC) de la División I de la NCAA. El equipo juega sus partidos como local en el Pete Maravich Assembly Center en Baton Rouge, Luisiana.

El equipo de baloncesto femenino de la LSU ha ganado dos campeonatos nacionales de la NCAA, en 2005 y 2007. Además, ha aparecido en siete Final Fours de la NCAA y ha ganado 18 campeonatos de la SEC. El equipo está dirigido por la entrenadora Kim Mulkey, quien llegó a la LSU en 2021 después de 21 años como entrenadora en jefe en la Universidad de Baylor.

Algunas de las jugadoras más notables de la LSU han sido:

* Seimone Augustus, dos veces campeona olímpica con Estados Unidos y campeona de la WNBA con las Minnesota Lynx.
* Sylvia Fowles, tres veces campeona olímpica con Estados Unidos y campeona de la WNBA con las Minnesota Lynx y las Chicago Sky.
* Temeka Johnson, campeona olímpica con Estados Unidos y campeona de la WNBA con las Sacramento Monarchs.
* Sue Bird, cuatro veces campeona olímpica con Estados Unidos y campeona de la WNBA con las Seattle Storm.
* Angel McCoughtry, campeona olímpica con Estados Unidos y campeona de la WNBA con las Atlanta Dream.

El equipo de baloncesto femenino de la LSU es uno de los programas más exitosos del país y cuenta con una larga historia de excelencia. El equipo es un contendiente anual para el campeonato nacional y siempre es un espectáculo digno de ver.