2020 Pac-12 Conference women's basketball tournament

The 2020 Pac-12 Conference women's basketball tournament presented by New York Life was a postseason tournament held March 5–8, 2020 at Mandalay Bay Events Center on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada.[1]

2020 Pac-12 Conference women's basketball tournament
ClassificationDivision I
Season201920
Teams12
SiteMandalay Bay Events Center
Las Vegas, NV
ChampionsOregon (2nd title)
Winning coachKelly Graves (2nd title)
MVPSabrina Ionescu (Oregon)
Attendance34,138
TelevisionPac-12 Network, ESPN2
2019–20 Pac-12 Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 2 Oregon†171 .944312  .939
No. 10 UCLA144 .778265  .839
No. 7 Stanford144 .778276  .818
No. 13 Arizona126 .667247  .774
No. 14 Oregon State108 .556239  .719
No. 25 Arizona State108 .5562011  .645
USC810 .4441714  .548
Utah612 .3331417  .452
Colorado513 .2781614  .533
Washington513 .2781317  .433
Washington State414 .2221120  .355
California315 .1671219  .387
2020 Pac-12 Tournament winner
As of October 27, 2023
Rankings from AP poll

Seeds

Teams were seeded by conference record, with ties broken in the following order: Tie-breaking procedures for determining all tournament seeding was:

  • For two-team tie

1. Results of head-to-head competition during the regular season.

2. Each team's record (won-lost percentage) vs. the team occupying the highest position in the final regular standings, and then continuing down through the standings until one team gains an advantage. When arriving at another group of tied teams while comparing records, use each team's record (won-lost percentage) against the collective tied teams as a group (prior to that group's own tie-breaking procedure), rather than the performance against individual tied teams.

3. Won-lost percentage against all Division I opponents.

4. Coin toss conducted by the Commissioner or designee.

  • For multiple-team tie

1. Results (won-lost percentage) of collective head-to-head competition during the regular season among the tied teams.

2. If more than two teams are still tied, each of the tied team's record (won-lost percentage) vs. the team occupying the highest position in the final regular season standings, and then continuing down through the standings, eliminating teams with inferior records, until one team gains an advantage.

When arriving at another group of tied teams while comparing records, use each team's record (won-lost percentage) against the collective tied teams as a group (prior to that group's own tie-breaking procedure), rather than the performance against individual tied teams.

After one team has an advantage and is seeded, all remaining teams in the multiple-team tie-breaker will repeat the multiple-team tie-breaking procedure.

If at any point the multiple-team tie is reduced to two teams, the two-team tie-breaking procedure will be applied.

3. Won-lost percentage against all Division I opponents.

4. Coin toss conducted by the Commissioner or designee.

Seed School Conf Overall Tiebreaker 1 Tiebreaker 2
1 Oregon 17–1 28–2
2 UCLA 14–4 25–4 1–0 vs Stanford
3 Stanford 14–4 25–5 0-1 vs UCLA
4 Arizona 12–6 23–6
5 Arizona State 10–8 20–10 1–1 vs Oregon State 0–1 vs. Oregon
6 Oregon State 10–8 22–8 1–1 vs Arizona State 0–2 vs. Oregon
7 USC 8–10 16–13
8 Utah 6–12 13–16
9 Washington 5–13 13–16 1-0 vs Colorado
10 Colorado 5–13 16–13 0-1 vs Washington
11 Washington State 4–14 11–19
12 California 3–15 11–18

Schedule

Thursday-Sunday, March 5–8, 2020

The top four seeds received a first-round bye.

Session Game Time* Matchup# Television Attendance
First Round – Thursday, March 5
1 1 11:30 AM #5 Arizona State 67 vs. #12 California 71 P12N 3,361
2 2:00 PM #8 Utah 72 vs. #9 Washington 63
2 3 6:00 PM #7 USC 69 vs. #10 Colorado 54 4,387
4 8:30 PM #6 Oregon State 82 vs. #11 Washington State 55
Quarterfinals – Friday, March 6
3 5 11:30 AM #4 Arizona 86 vs #12 California 73 P12N 6,782
6 2:00 PM #1 Oregon 79 vs #8 Utah 59
4 7 6:00 PM #2 UCLA 73 vs. #7 USC 66 5,548
8 8:30 PM #3 Stanford 68 vs. #6 Oregon State 57
Semifinals – Saturday, March 7
5 9 6:00 PM #4 Arizona 70 vs. #1 Oregon 88 P12N 7,266
10 8:30 PM #3 Stanford 67 vs. #2 UCLA 51
Championship Game – Sunday, March 8
6 11 5:00 PM #1 Oregon 89 vs. #3 Stanford 56 ESPN2 6,794
*Game Times in PT.

Bracket

First round
Thursday, March 5
P12N
Quarterfinals
Friday, March 6
P12N
Semifinals
Saturday, March 7
P12N
Championship Game
Sunday, March 8
ESPN2
            
1 #3 Oregon 79
8 Utah 59
8 Utah 72
9 Washington 63
1 #3 Oregon 88
4 #13 Arizona 70
4 #13 Arizona 86
12 California 73
5 #24 Arizona State 67
12 California 71
1 #3 Oregon 89
3 #7 Stanford 56
2 #8 UCLA 73
7 USC 66
7 USC 69
10 Colorado 54
2 #8 UCLA 51
3 #7 Stanford 67
3 #7 Stanford 68
6 #14 Oregon State 57
6 #14 Oregon State 82
11 Washington State 55

Note: * denotes overtime

All-Tournament Team

Source:[2]

Name Pos. Year Team
Ruthy Hebard F Sr. Oregon
Lexie Hull G So. Stanford
Sabrina Ionescu G Sr. Oregon
Aari McDonald G Jr. Arizona
Michaela Onyenwere F Jr. UCLA
Kiana Williams G Jr. Stanford

Most Outstanding Player

Name Pos. Year Team
Sabrina Ionescu G Sr. Oregon

See also

References

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