Lady Vols among women's No. 1 seeds (with downloadable bracket)

photo Tennessee players, from left, Jannah Tucker, Meighan Simmons, Andraya Carter, Cierra Burdick, Jordan Reynolds and Isabelle Harrison celebrate as they receive a No. 1 seed in the NCAA women's basketball tournament. Players, coaches and fans gathered Monday night at the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame for the selection show.

All season there has been a buzz around women's college basketball about Connecticut and Notre Dame.

Now the stage is set for the former Big East rivals to meet in a historic national championship game.

The teams enter the NCAA tournament unbeaten -- only the second time that's ever happened. They are on a collision course to meet in the national championship game. If they do both get to Nashville, the Irish will be all that stands between Geno Auriemma and a record ninth NCAA championship, breaking a tie with Tennessee's retired Pat Summitt.

"We really haven't talked, I bet hardly at all, about this national championship or what number it is or any of that," Auriemma said.

Despite being the 13th women's team to go unbeaten during the regular season, the Irish have felt almost unappreciated with most of the talk centered on the Huskies. Coach Muffet McGraw doesn't seem to mind.

"I like it because we can get a chip on our shoulder and head into the tournament with a bit of chip," she said.

Even though UConn and Notre Dame didn't meet this season, the two teams know plenty about each other after having met 12 times the previous three seasons. Notre Dame isn't intimidated by Connecticut; the Irish have won seven of the past nine meetings with the Huskies.

"It was very unusual to go through a whole season without playing them, we're so used to it -- three times every year," McGraw said. "We've gotten pretty good at beating them the last couple of years."

Before the potential meeting of unbeatens, the two might have to go through Southeastern Conference powers Tennessee and South Carolina, who also earned No. 1 seeds. While it's the 22nd time that UT's Lady Vols have earned a top spot, it's the first for the Gamecocks.

The Huskies, Lady Vols and Gamecocks all could have to play on an opponent's home court with a trip to Nashville on the line. Stanford, Notre Dame, Louisville and Nebraska, who are all hosting regionals, were a combined 52-3 at home this season.

The Lady Vols, who won the SEC tournament championship, are the top seed in the Louisville Regional and also would like nothing more than to break the tie with Connecticut and win their ninth NCAA title. They open up against Northwestern State and will be trying to end a five-year drought of not making the Final Four. The Lady Vols won't have an easy path. West Virginia is the second seed. Host Louisville is the three seed and Maryland is the four.

Tennessee was involved in the only other meeting between unbeaten. The Lady Vols routed Liberty in the opener of the 1998 tournament when both were undefeated.

Like its SEC rival, South Carolina doesn't have an easy road to the Final Four. The Gamecocks could face an inspired young North Carolina team in the regional semifinals before potentially playing host Stanford.

The Tar Heels and their stellar freshman class, led by Diamond Deshields, beat the Gamecocks in December. The Tar Heels also could have coach Sylvia Hatchell back on the sideline at that point. The Hall of Famer battled leukemia during the regular season.

While Hatchell's status is unknown for the tournament, Baylor will be missing coach Kim Mulkey for the first game. She is suspended for the first round game against Western Kentucky for comments she made last season after losing to Louisville in the regional semifinals.

"I haven't talked to the team in depth about me not coaching in the first game," Mulkey said. "I'll watch it on television at home. ... I always tell the team something could happen to me on that sideline and you should be able to coach yourself."

Connecticut could have to beat host Nebraska in the regional semifinals if both teams make it that far. The Huskies have made it to the Final Four in a record six straight seasons. They hope to make it to Nashville to keep that streak alive.

If the Huskies do win the national championship, it would be the fifth time they went undefeated in a season. This would be the first time that they won 40 games, joining Baylor as the only teams ever to accomplish that feat.

The defending national champions have won games by an average of 36 points. They open up at home against Prairie View A&M on Sunday night. The Lady Panthers became the ninth team to reach the NCAA tournament with a losing record when they won the Southwestern Conference championship.

Tennessee will be making its 33rd straight appearance in the NCAA tournament, getting into the field ever year. Five teams will be making their first trips -- Akron, North Dakota, South Dakota, Winthrop and Wright State.

While those schools will be getting their first taste of the NCAAs, UT-Chattanooga's Jim Foster became the first coach to take four different programs to the NCAA women's tournament.

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