Minnesota Golden Gophers women's basketball

Summary

The Minnesota Golden Gophers women's basketball team represents the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Golden Gophers have played in the Big Ten since the conference began sponsoring basketball in 1982. The team plays its home games in Williams Arena and is currently coached by Dawn Plitzuweit.

Minnesota Golden Gophers
2023–24 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's basketball team
UniversityUniversity of Minnesota
Head coachDawn Plitzuweit (1st season)
ConferenceBig Ten
LocationMinneapolis, Minnesota
ArenaWilliams Arena
(Capacity: 14,625)
NicknameGolden Gophers
ColorsMaroon and gold[1]
   
Uniforms
Home jersey
Team colours
Home
Away jersey
Team colours
Away


NCAA tournament Final Four
2004
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
2004
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
2003, 2004, 2005
NCAA tournament appearances
1994, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2015, 2018
AIAW tournament Sweet Sixteen
1977
AIAW tournament appearances
1977, 1981, 1982

The Golden Gophers have made nine appearances in the NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship, highlighted by a Final Four appearance in 2004. The Golden Gophers also have three appearances in the AIAW women's basketball tournament.

History edit

The Golden Gophers have had 5 players play professional basketball, as well as eight players named All-Americans. Four players, Lindsay Whalen, Amanda Zahui B., and Janel McCarville, Rachel Banham were selected in the top four of WNBA draft. The Gophers have ranked in the top 20 nationally in attendance for seven seasons, starting with the 2001–2002 season.

Postseason appearances edit

AIAW Women's Basketball Tournament appearances edit

The Golden Gophers appeared in the AIAW women's basketball tournament (the precursor to the modern NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship) three times before it was discontinued in 1982. They compiled a record of 1–3.

Year Round Opponent Result
1977 First Round Delta State L 42–87
1981 First Round Jackson State L 65–68
1982 First Round
Quarterfinals
St. Johns
Rutgers
W 68–56
L 75–83

NCAA Division I Tournament results edit

The Golden Gophers have appeared in ten NCAA Division I Tournaments. They achieved their highest ranking in 2005 with a #3 seed. Their overall record is 12–10.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1994 #10 First Round
Second Round
#7 Notre Dame
#2 Vanderbilt
W 81–76
L 72–98
2002 #5 First Round
Second Round
#12 UNLV
#4 North Carolina
W 71–54
L 69–72
2003 #6 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#11 Tulane
#3 Stanford
#2 Texas
W 68–48
W 68–56
L 60–73
2004 #7 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#10 UCLA
#2 Kansas State
#3 Boston College
#1 Duke
#2 Connecticut
W 92–81
W 80–61
W 76–63
W 82–75
L 58–67
2005 #3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#14 St. Francis (PA)
#6 Virginia
#2 Baylor
W 64–33
W 73–58
L 57–64
2006 #8 First Round #9 Washington L 69–73
2008 #9 First Round #8 Texas L 55–72
2009 #10 First Round
Second Round
#7 Notre Dame
#2 Texas A&M
W 79–71
L 42–73
2015 #8 First Round #9 DePaul L 72–79
2018 #10 First Round
Second Round
#7 Green Bay
#2 Oregon
W 89–77
L 73–101

Head coaches edit

Gophers in the WNBA edit

Player Draft Seasons Years
Lindsay Whalen 2004 – 4th by Connecticut 15 (2004-2018) Last with Minnesota
4x WNBA Champion
Janel McCarville 2005 – 1st by Charlotte 9 (2005-2010; 2013-2014; 2016) Last with Minnesota
WNBA Champion
Emily Fox 2009 – 30th by Minnesota 0 -
Amanda Zahui B. 2015 – 2nd by Tulsa 7 (2015-2021; 2023-present) Currently with Washington
Shae Kelley 2015 – 35th by Minnesota 1 (2015) Last with Minnesota
WNBA Champion
Rachel Banham 2016 – 4th by Connecticut 7 (2016-present) Currently with Minnesota
Carlie Wagner 2018 – 36th by Minnesota 0 -
Kenisha Bell 2019 – 30th by Minnesota 1 (2019) Last with Minnesota

Year-by-year results edit

Conference tournament winners noted with # Source [3]

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason Coaches' poll AP poll
Joan Stevenson (Independent) (1971–1972)
1971–72 Joan Stevenson 5–3
Joan Stevenson: 5–3
Deb Wilson (Independent) (1972–1973)
1972–73 Deb Wilson 8–8
Deb Wilson: 8–8
Linda Wells (Independent) (1973–1974)
1973–74 Linda Wells 3–10 MWIAA
Linda Wells: 3–10
Jenny Johnson (Independent) (1974–1977)
1974–75 Jenny Johnson 7–12 MWIAA
1975–76 Jenny Johnson 14–11 MWIAA
1976–77 Jenny Johnson 15–14 AIAW First Round
Jenny Johnson: 36–37
Ellen Mosher Hanson (Independent, Big Ten) (1977–1987)
1977–78 Ellen Mosher Hanson 24–10 NWIT Seventh Place
1978–79 Ellen Mosher Hanson 17–15 NWIT Fifth Place
1979–80 Ellen Mosher Hanson 18–11 AIAW Regional
1980–81 Ellen Mosher Hanson 28–7 AIAW First Round 18
Big Ten Conference
1981–82 Ellen Mosher Hanson 18–11 0–1 AIAW First Round
1982–83 Ellen Mosher Hanson 20–7 13–5 T-3rd
1983–84 Ellen Mosher Hanson 12–15 9–9 7th
1984–85 Ellen Mosher Hanson 18–10 13–5 3rd
1985–86 Ellen Mosher Hanson 8–20 4–14 9th
1986–87 Ellen Mosher Hanson 9–19 4–14 T-8th
Ellen Mosher Hanson: 172–125 43–48
LaRue Fields (Big Ten) (1988–1991)
1987–88 LaRue Fields 9–18 5–13 8th
1988–89 LaRue Fields 7–21 4–14 10th
1989–90 LaRue Fields 8–21 3–15 T-9th
LaRue Fields: 24–60 12–42
Linda Hill-MacDonald (Big Ten) (1990–1997)
1990–91 Linda Hill-MacDonald 6–22 2–16 10th
1991–92 Linda Hill-MacDonald 8–19 3–15 T-9th
1992–93 Linda Hill-MacDonald 14–12 9–9 5th
1993–94 Linda Hill-MacDonald 18–11 10–8 T-4th NCAA Second Round
1994–95 Linda Hill-MacDonald 12–15 7–9 T-7th
1995–96 Linda Hill-MacDonald 4–23 0–16 11th
1996–97 Linda Hill-MacDonald 4–24 1–15 11th
Linda Hill-MacDonald: 66–126 32–88
Cheryl Littlejohn (Big Ten) (1997–2001)
1997–98 Cheryl Littlejohn 4–23 1–15 11th
1998–99 Cheryl Littlejohn 7–20 2–14 T-10th
1999–2000 Cheryl Littlejohn 10–18 3–13 T-10th
2000–01 Cheryl Littlejohn 8–20 1–15 10th
Cheryl Littlejohn: 29–81 7–57
Brenda Oldfield (Big Ten) (2001–2002)
2001–02 Brenda Oldfield 22–8 11–5 T-2nd NCAA Second Round 21 18
Brenda Oldfield: 22–8 11–5
Pam Borton (Big Ten) (2002–2014)
2002–03 Pam Borton 25–6 12–4 T-2nd NCAA Sweet Sixteen 13 17
2003–04 Pam Borton 25–9 9–7 6th NCAA Final Four 4 24
2004–05 Pam Borton 26–8 12–4 4th NCAA Sweet Sixteen 11 12
2005–06 Pam Borton 19–10 11–5 T-3rd NCAA First Round 25
2006–07 Pam Borton 17–16 7–9 T-5th WNIT First Round (Bye)
2007–08 Pam Borton 20–12 11–7 T-3rd NCAA First Round
2008–09 Pam Borton 20–12 11–7 T-5th NCAA Second Round
2009–10 Pam Borton 13–17 6–12 11th
2010–11 Pam Borton 12–18 4–12 9th
2011–12 Pam Borton 19–17 6–10 8th WBI Champions
2012–13 Pam Borton 18–14 7–9 T-8th WNIT First Round
2013-14 Pam Borton 22–13 8–8 T-6th WNIT Third Round
Pam Borton: 236–152 104–94
Marlene Stollings (Big Ten) (2014–2018)
2014-15 Marlene Stollings 23–10 11–7 6th NCAA First Round
2015-16 Marlene Stollings 20–12 11–7 5th WNIT Second Round
2016-17 Marlene Stollings 15–16 5–11 10th
2017-18 Marlene Stollings 24–9 11–5 T–3rd NCAA Second Round
Marlene Stollings: 82–47 (.636) 38–30 (.559)
Lindsay Whalen (Big Ten) (2018–2023)
2018-19 Lindsay Whalen 21–11 9–9 T-6th WNIT Second Round
2019-20 Lindsay Whalen 16–15 5–12 11th
2020-21 Lindsay Whalen 8–13 7–11 10th
2021-22 Lindsay Whalen 15–18 7–11 T-9th WNIT Second Round
2022-23 Lindsay Whalen 11–19 4–14 12th
Lindsay Whalen: 71–76 (.483) 31–56 (.356)
Dawn Plitzuweit (Big Ten) (2023–present)
2023-24 Dawn Plitzuweit 0–0 0–0
Dawn Plitzuweit: 0–0 (–) 0–0 (–)
Total: 769–749

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References edit

  1. ^ "Colors and Type | University Relations". Retrieved December 20, 2022.
  2. ^ "Lindsay Whalen Takes Over Women's Basketball". Archived from the original on 2018-07-01. Retrieved 2018-04-12.
  3. ^ "Media Guide" (PDF). University of Minnesota. Retrieved 10 Aug 2013.

External links edit

  • Official website