Who’s in the 2012 women’s tournament?

Sixty-four teams will participate in the 2012 Division III women’s basketball tournament. There are 43 automatic bids awarded to conference champions (Pool A), one for teams not in those 42 conferences (Pool B) and 20 at-large teams (Pool C).

Here are the teams that clinched the 43 automatic bids. The number in parentheses is the team’s seeding in their conference tournament. The NCAA bracket will be announced on Monday, February 27. You can read more about the tournament’s structure here.

Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference: La Roche (1)
American Southwest Conference: Concordia (Texas) (1-West)
Capital Athletic Conference: Mary Washington (1)
Centennial Conference: Muhlenberg (3)
City University of New York Athletic Conference: Baruch (2)
College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin: Illinois Wesleyan (1)
Colonial States Athletic Conference: Gwynedd-Mercy (1)
Commonwealth Coast Conference: Salve Regina (2)
Empire 8: Ithaca (1)
Great Northeast Athletic Conference: Emmanuel (1)
Great South Athletic Conference: Maryville (Tenn.) (1)
Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference: Franklin (1)
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Coe (2)
Landmark Conference: Catholic (3)
Liberty League: Vassar (3)
Little East Conference: Rhode Island College (1)
Massachusetts State College Athletic Conference: Bridgewater State (1)
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association: Calvin (1)
Middle Atlantic Commonwealth: Lebanon Valley (1)
Middle Atlantic Freedom: Misericordia (2)
Midwest Conference: Monmouth (2)
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: St. Thomas (1)
New England Collegiate Conference: Elms (2)
New England Small College Athletic Conference: Amherst (1)
New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference: Babson (1)
New Jersey Athletic Conference: William Paterson (1-North)
North Atlantic Conference: Castleton State (1)
North Coast Athletic Conference: DePauw (1)
North Eastern Athletic Conference: Keuka (2-North)
Northern Athletics Conference: Wisconsin Lutheran (1)
Northwest Conference: George Fox (1)
Ohio Athletic Conference: Mount Union (1)
Old Dominion Athletic Conference: Guilford (3)
Presidents Athletic Conference: Thomas More (1)
St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Westminster (Mo.) (1)
Skyline Conference: Mount St. Mary (1)
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Cal Lutheran (4)
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference: Centre (1-East)
State University of New York Athletic Conference: Oneonta State (3)
University Athletic Association: Chicago (No tournament)
Upper Midwest Athletic Conference: Martin Luther (1)
USA South Athletic Conference: Ferrum (1)
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: UW-Stevens Point (1)

Who’s in the 2012 men’s tournament?

Sixty-two teams will participate in the 2012 Division III men’s basketball tournament. There are 42 automatic bids awarded to conference champions (Pool A), one for teams not in those 42 conferences (Pool B) and 19 at-large teams (Pool C).

Here are the teams that clinched the 42 automatic bids. The number in parentheses is the team’s seeding in their conference tournament. The NCAA bracket will be announced on Monday, February 27. You can read more about the tournament’s structure here.

Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference: Medaille (1)
American Southwest Conference: McMurry (3-West)
Capital Athletic Conference: York (Pa.) (4)
Centennial Conference: Franklin and Marshall (1)
City University of New York Athletic Conference: Staten Island (1)
College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin: North Central (Ill.) (1)
Colonial States Athletic Conference: Cabrini (1)
Commonwealth Coast Conference: Endicott (3)
Empire 8: Ithaca (4)
Great Northeast Athletic Conference: Albertus Magnus (1)
Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference: Rose-Hulman (3)
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Buena Vista (2)
Landmark Conference: Scranton (1)
Liberty League: Skidmore (2)
Little East Conference: Eastern Connecticut (1)
Massachusetts State College Athletic Conference: Salem State (1)
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association: Hope (1)
Middle Atlantic Commonwealth: Messiah (1)
Middle Atlantic Freedom: Misericordia (1)
Midwest Conference: Carroll (4)
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: St. Thomas (1)
New England Collegiate Conference: Becker (1)
New England Small College Athletic Conference: Amherst (1)
New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference: MIT (1)
New Jersey Athletic Conference: William Paterson (1-North)
North Atlantic Conference: Castleton State (1)
North Coast Athletic Conference: Wooster (2)
North Eastern Athletic Conference: Morrisville State (1-North)
Northern Athletics Conference: Edgewood (3)
Northwest Conference: Whitworth (1)
Ohio Athletic Conference: Capital (2)
Old Dominion Athletic Conference: Virginia Wesleyan (1)
Presidents Athletic Conference: Bethany (1)
St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Westminster (Mo.) (2)
Skyline Conference: Farmingdale State (2)
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (1)
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference: Trinty (Tex.) (1 West)
State University of New York Athletic Conference: Oswego State (1)
University Athletic Association: Washington U. (No tournament)
Upper Midwest Athletic Conference: Northwestern (Minn.) (2)
USA South Athletic Conference: Christopher Newport (1)
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: UW-River Falls (2)

Who’s in the women’s tournament?

Here are the teams that clinched the 43 automatic bids into the Division III women’s basketball tournament. The number in parentheses is the team’s seeding in their conference tournament. Coe, Daniel Webster, La Roche and Vassar are headed to the NCAA tournament for the first time in program history. The NCAA tournament bracket will be released on Monday afternoon. You can read more about the tournament’s structure here.

Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference: La Roche (1)
American Southwest Conference: Howard Payne (1-West)
Capital Athletic Conference: York (Pa.) (3)
Centennial Conference: Muhlenberg (2)
City University of New York Athletic Conference: Baruch (1)
College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin: Illinois Wesleyan (1)
Colonial States Athletic Conference: Neumann (1)
Commonwealth Coast Conference: Salve Regina (1)
Empire 8: Stevens (2)
Great Northeast Athletic Conference: Emmanuel (1)
Great South Athletic Conference: Piedmont (3)
Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference: Hanover (1)
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Coe (1)
Landmark Conference: Juniata (1)
Liberty League: Vassar (4)
Little East Conference: Western Connecticut State (1)
Massachusetts State College Athletic Conference: Bridgewater State (2)
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association: Calvin (1)
Middle Atlantic Commonwealth: Lebanon Valley (1)
Middle Atlantic Freedom: DeSales (2)
Midwest Conference: St. Norbert (1)
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Concordia-Moorhead (2)
New England Collegiate Conference: Daniel Webster (3)
New England Small College Athletic Conference: Amherst (1)
New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference: Babson (1)
New Jersey Athletic Conference: William Paterson (1-North)
North Atlantic Conference: Husson (1)
North Coast Athletic Conference: Denison (1)
North Eastern Athletic Conference: Keuka (2)
Northern Athletics Conference: Wisconsin Lutheran (1)
Northwest Conference: George Fox (2)
Ohio Athletic Conference: Mount Union (1)
Old Dominion Athletic Conference: Randolph-Macon (1)
Presidents Athletic Conference: Thomas More (1)
St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Webster (3)
Skyline Conference: Mount St. Mary (1)
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Occidental (1)
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference: DePauw (1-East)
State University of New York Athletic Conference: Geneseo State (1)
University Athletic Association: Chicago (No tournament)
Upper Midwest Athletic Conference: Minnesota-Morris (1)
USA South Athletic Conference: Christopher Newport (2)
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: UW-Stevens Point (1)

Who’s in the men’s tournament?

Here are the teams that clinched the 42 automatic bids into the 2011 Division III men’s basketball tournament. The number in parentheses is the team’s seeding in their conference tournament. The NCAA bracket will be announced on Monday afternoon. You can read more about the tournament’s structure here.

Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference: La Roche (1)
American Southwest Conference: McMurry (1-West)
Capital Athletic Conference: St. Mary’s (Md.) (1)
Centennial Conference: Franklin and Marshall (1)
City University of New York Athletic Conference: Medgar Evers (2)
College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin: Augustana (2)
Colonial States Athletic Conference: Cabrini (1)
Commonwealth Coast Conference: Salve Regina (5)
Empire 8: Hartwick (3)
Great Northeast Athletic Conference: Johnson and Wales (2)
Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference: Manchester (1)
Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Luther (1)
Landmark Conference: Scranton (1)
Liberty League: Skidmore (3)
Little East Conference: Rhode Island College (1)
Massachusetts State College Athletic Conference: Bridgewater State (3)
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association: Hope (1)
Middle Atlantic Commonwealth: Alvernia (1)
Middle Atlantic Freedom: Delaware Valley (1)
Midwest Conference: St. Norbert (1)
Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: St. Thomas (1)
New England Collegiate Conference: Elms (2)
New England Small College Athletic Conference: Middlebury (2)
New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference: MIT (2)
New Jersey Athletic Conference: New Jersey City (2-North)
North Atlantic Conference: Husson (1)
North Coast Athletic Conference: Wooster (1)
North Eastern Athletic Conference: Wells (2)
Northern Athletics Conference: Benedictine (2)
Northwest Conference: Whitworth (1)
Ohio Athletic Conference: Marietta (1)
Old Dominion Athletic Conference: Randolph-Macon (2)
Presidents Athletic Conference: Bethany (3)
St. Louis Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Webster (1)
Skyline Conference: SUNY-Purchase (1)
Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: Redlands (1)
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference: Centre (1-East)
State University of New York Athletic Conference: Buffalo State (2)
University Athletic Association: Rochester (No tournament)
Upper Midwest Athletic Conference: Northwestern (Minn.) (1)
USA South Athletic Conference: NC Wesleyan (1)
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference: UW-Stevens Point (1)

A memorable one

Throughout the recently completed season, Chapman junior forward Justin Riley blogged about the Panthers’ historic run. His final entry recounts the Panthers’ tournament experience and offers thoughts on the special bond he had with this year’s teammates.

We thank Justin for his thoughtful, well written entries throughout this season. And he was just as good on the court, picking up All Independent Player of Year honors. He’ll be back for his senior season at Chapman this fall, and we hope he’ll chronicle it for us.

On October 15, a group of guys entered the gym with one thing on their minds: getting the chance to prove himself on the big stage. Practices, games and teammates came and went, but the passion to take Chapman to the postseason for the first time in 26 years burned on.

After concluding the season with a 23-2 record, some positive thoughts filtered through my head:

1. We were ranked in the D3 Hoops Top 25 Poll for all 13 weeks.
2. We had a 17-1 in-region record.
3. We defeated NCAA Division II opponent BYU-Hawaii (ranked 18th at the time).
4. We ended the season on a 13-game winning streak (23.7 scoring margin during streak).

On the other hand, some negative thoughts filtered through as well:

1. Our strength of schedule was weak (no surprise), 392 out of 407.
2. We didn’t have any standout Division III wins, losing to our one real test: Claremont-Mudd-Scripps.
3. We hadn’t played a team with a winning percentage above .500 since December.
4. And of course, Chapman hadn’t made the tourney since moving to Division III in 1994.

Once all of these thoughts made their way in and out, I still wasn’t sure if we were going to make it. As an avid board reader, it looked like we were very likely to get a Pool B bid, but I couldn’t convince myself for certain; setting myself up for heartbreak was a pain I wanted to avoid. On Monday morning, five of us met at a teammate’s house to watch the selection show hoping that we would see our name in the bracket for the first time. The show started…we waited…we waited…and then, history happened.

WE MADE IT!!

If just making it to the tourney wasn’t good enough, finding out we were hosting Claremont-Mudd-Scripps in the first round was the cherry on top. Going in to this game, we knew it was going to be a 40-minute battle. CMS is a well coached, hard nosed team that prides itself on toughness and defense. The practices leading up to the game were very physical and competitive.

At 7:00 PM on March 4, the battle began. The environment was incredible with almost 2000 people in attendance; the Chapman student body covered the entire west side of the gym in white, while roughly 100 CMS students stood across cheering in their respective school colors. CMS jumped out quickly, but we were able to close the gap and fight back-and-forth for the remainder of the first half. Just before halftime, Griffin Ramme hit a buzzer beater three-pointer in the corner to give us a three point advantage going into the locker room.

The second half started similar to the first with CMS jumping out quickly. Once again, we were able to battle back and seize the lead for the final six minutes of the game and capture the victory 58-47. When the buzzer sounded, the gym erupted and the students stormed the court. Words cannot express how I immediately felt, but it was a moment that I will never forget. After the game, the CMS coaching staff and players showed tremendous sportsmanship and wished us well against Whitworth.

The next morning we were up at 4:00 AM to head to the airport to catch a flight to Spokane, Washington. Waking up that early after a physical game didn’t lead to a very comfortable flight, but when we arrived at our hotel, I had no problem taking advantage of the five-hour window to sleep before our evening practice. At practice, we broke down our scouting report and prepared ourselves for another battle Saturday night.

When we arrived to the gym Saturday night, we were very focused and determined to upset Whitworth on their home court. Prior to the game, our coach emphasized that if we came out slow, it would be a long and hard battle back. And that it was. Whitworth came out firing as we found ourselves down 21-6 with 10 minutes to play in the first half. We were able to battle back and close the gap heading into the break trailing 32-26.

The second half mirrored the first as Whitworth expanded the lead to double digits in the opening minutes. We fought hard to close the gap, but were unsuccessful at getting any closer than six points the remainder of the game. Nate Montgomery and Eric Beal did an outstanding job on both ends of the court leading them to a 21-point victory.

Silence filled the locker room as all of us realized that our historic season had come to an end. As players changed and left the locker room, the four guys that started alongside of me every game for the past two seasons—Dan Aguilar, Jared Kaiser, Griffin Ramme and Kyle Wood—sat there in silence. Tears immediately streamed down our eyes as we embraced each other in the locker room for one last time. Though Griffin and I have one more year of eligibility, the camaraderie the five of us shared is something special. I am grateful I had the opportunity to help Chapman make the postseason tournament for the first time in 26 years, but I am more grateful that I was able to share it with this group of guys.

To Dan, Jared and Kyle: thank you for a memorable year.