Ncaa Mens Basketball Bracket 2010
Ncaa Mens Basketball Bracket 2010, The NCAA women’s basketball bracket 2010 is officially out now. Of course, the NCAA women’s basketball bracket 2010 technically has 64 teams, but really has one. The Connecticut Huskies have become the most dominating.
team in women’s history, and maybe the most dominating Division I team in any gender for three decades. Already, the Huskies broke their own record-setting winning streak, and can beat the UCLA men’s 88-game streak next year. But to keep that alive, they must win the national title first, and the NCAA women’s basketball bracket 2010 has 63 teams trying – perhaps in vain – to stop them.
The Huskies got put in the Dayton regional, as their first possible victim is 16′th seeded Southern. Afterwards, they next face either Temple or James Madison, and possibly Iowa State or Virginia in the Sweet 16. On the other side, Ohio State becomes the team most likely to stop Connecticut, as the No. 2 seed. Florida State trails behind them in third, and the Big East’s St. John’s got the sixth seed.
There are other teams and regions in the NCAA women’s basketball bracket 2010. In fact, if the Huskies get out of Dayton, they could face old arch-rival Tennessee in the Final Four. The Lady Volunteers returned to their traditional place as a top seed, this time in the Memphis region. They start off against Austin Peay, the only team in with a losing record.
Other challengers in this region of the NCAA women’s basketball bracket 2010 are second seeded Duke and third seeded West Virginia. Baylor received the fourth seed, with old powers like Texas and LSU at six and seven.
On the other side, 32 teams may play for the right to face Connecticut in the national title game. The NCAA women’s basketball bracket 2010 could have had two undefeated teams, but Nebraska fell to Texas A&M in the Big 12 semifinals. Yet the Cornhuskers got the No. 1 seed in the Kansas City region, a year after they missed the tournament altogether.
Trailing Nebraska is Notre Dame, who was Connecticut’s record-setting 71’st straight victim. Another Big 12 power, Oklahoma, got the third seed with Kentucky at fourth.


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