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2009 MAC women's basketball tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2009 MAC women's basketball tournament
Logo for the 2009 Mid-American Conference tournament
ClassificationDivision I
Teams12
SiteQuicken Loans Arena
Cleveland, Ohio
ChampionsBall State
Winning coachKelly Packard
MVPTracy Pontius (Bowling Green)
MAC women's basketball tournaments
← 2008
2010 →
2008–09 Mid-American Conference women's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Bowling Green 15 1   .938 28 4   .875
Kent State 8 8   .500 19 10   .655
Miami (OH) 7 9   .438 16 15   .516
Ohio 7 9   .438 13 18   .419
Akron 6 10   .375 11 19   .367
Buffalo 2 14   .125 8 24   .250
West
Ball State 14 2   .875 25 8   .758
Toledo 11 5   .688 18 13   .581
Northern Illinois 10 6   .625 15 15   .500
Central Michigan 9 7   .563 18 14   .563
Eastern Michigan 4 12   .250 8 21   .276
Western Michigan 3 13   .188 7 23   .233
2009 MAC tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll

The 2009 Mid-American Conference women's basketball tournament was the post-season basketball tournament for the Mid-American Conference (MAC) 2008–2009 season. The winner of the tournament received the MAC's automatic bid into the 2009 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament. Regular season west division winner Ball State won the tournament over east division winner Bowling Green.[1] Tracy Pontius was the tournament MVP.[2]

Format

[edit]

Each of the 12 women's basketball teams in the MAC receive a berth in the conference tournament. Teams are seeded per division by conference record with the following tie-breakers:[3]

  • Two-team tie:
  1. Head-to-head competition
  2. Division record (ten games)
  3. Record vs. #1 team in division proceeding through the #6 team, if necessary
  4. Non-division record (six games)
  5. Record vs. #1 team in the opposite division proceeding through the #6 team, if necessary
  6. Coin flip by the Commissioner
  • Three-team tie:
  1. Total won–lost record of games played among the tied teams
  2. Division record (ten games)
  3. Record vs. #1 team in division proceeding through the #6 team, if necessary
  4. Non-division record (six games)
  5. Record vs. #1 team in the opposite division proceeding through the #6 team, if necessary
  6. Coin flip by the Commissioner

Note: Once a three-team tie has been reduced to two teams, the two-team tiebreakers go in effect. If there are multiple ties, the ties are broken from the top down (e.g. a tie for #3 will be broken before a tie for #5).

The top two seeds in each division receive byes into the Quarterfinals. All rounds were held at Quicken Loans Arena.

Bracket

[edit]
First round
Wednesday, March 11
Quarterfinals
Friday, March 13
Semifinals
Saturday, March 14
Final
Sunday, March 15
            
1E Bowling Green 82
4W Central Michigan 65
4W Central Michigan 67
5E Akron 69
1E Bowling Green 79
2W Toledo 66
2W Toledo 77
3E Ohio 70
3E Ohio 68
6W Western Michigan 57
1E Bowling Green 51
1W Ball State 55
1W Ball State 76
4E Miami 51
4E Miami 75
5W Eastern Michigan 69
1W Ball State 68
6E Buffalo 54
2E Kent State 54
6E Buffalo 66
3W Northern Illinois 52
6E Buffalo 57

All-Tournament Team

[edit]

Tournament MVP – Tracy Pontius, Bowling Green[4]

Player Team
Emily Maggert Ball State
Kourtney Brown Buffalo
Tanika Mays Toledo
Niki McCoy Bowling Green
Tracy Pontius Bowling Green

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Green powers Ball State past Bowling Green, into NCAAs". ESPN. Retrieved June 4, 2022.[dead link]
  2. ^ "Mid-American Conference women's basketball championship history". FOX News. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  3. ^ "Men's and Women's Tiebreaker Procedures - MAC-Sports.com Official Web Site of the Mid-American Conference". Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  4. ^ "Ball State Tops Falcons, 55-51, to Win MAC Tournament". Bowling Green Athletics. Retrieved June 5, 2022.