Pac-10 women gamer high NCAA seeds Jeremy Forrest Emerald Shawntinice Polk (00), guarding Oregon's Kedzie Gunderson, and the Arizona Wildcats play Notre Dame in the first round. Three Pac-10 teams are seeded 1 Oth or better in the NCAA Tournament Jesse Thomas Sports Reporter The stage is set for the madness to begin. For women’s Pac-10 basketball, three teams will represent the con ference amidst the 61 other squads. Arizona is the No. 6 seed in the East and will face No. 11-seeded Notre Dame. In the West, Wash ington sits in ninth to face Wis consin-Green Bay. The Huskies and the Phoenix will battle at McArthur Court. Stanford, the Pac-10 Champion and No. 3 seed, will face No. 14-seed ed Western Michigan in the first round in Palo Alto, Calif. UCLA, which appeared to be a bubble team, did not make the bracket. Arizona will go head-to-head against Notre Dame at Bramlage Coliseum in Manhattan, Kan. Notre Dame (19-10, 10-6 Big East) won four of its last five games to finish the season. The Irish are led by sophomore Jacquelin Batteast at 14.9 points and 8.3 rebounds per game. In 2002, the Irish went to the tourna ment and lost in the second round to Tennessee. If Arizona (22-8,13-5 Pac-10) can win in the first round, the Wildcats will face either Kansas State or Har vard. Arizona could then advance to the regional where they would most likely face No. 2-seeded Purdue. “We are obviously going to be tested early, but I think it’s really going to help us,” Arizona head coach Joan Bonvicini told the Daily Wildcat. “I have a lot of confidence in this team. We are very athletic, we have good shooters and we have good depth.” Washington (22-7, 13-5 Pac-10) finished second in the Pac-10 standings, but the Huskies will have their hands full against Wis consin-Green Bay. UWGB (27-3, 15-1 Horizon) re ceived an automatic bid as the eighth seed in the tournament after winning the Horizon League Women’s Basketball Championship. The Phoenix are led by senior guard and tournament MVP Kristy Loiselle. Loiselle averages 14.4 points per game and shoots better than 57 percent from the field. This will be the fifth tournament appear ance in the last six years for Wiscon sin-Green Bay. If Washington can route the Phoenix, they will probably play No. 1 seed Louisiana State or pos sibly 16th-seed SW Texas. Wash ington will clearly have a tough first two rounds before making the regional. “This team has so much poten tial,” captain Loree Payne told the Seattle Times. “If we put it together, we can have a good run. It's up to us at this point.” Stanford (26-4, 15-3 Pac-10) will do battle with Western Michigan (20-11, 10-6 MAC) in their home town. The Cardinal dominated all year, winning the regular-season ti tle and the Pac-10 Tournament Championship. The Broncos received an auto matic bid to the NCAA Tournament after winning the Mid-American Conference Championship for the first time since 1984-85. Western Michigan earned its first 20-win season since 1977-78, and this will be the Broncos’ first tourney ap pearance since 1985. The Broncos are led by senior for ward Kristin Koetsier, who averages 17.3 points and 6.2 rebounds per game and has earned six double doubles on the year. If the Cardinal can get past the first round, they will face the win ner of the Minnesota-Tulane matchup. And if Stanford advances to the regional, it could face No. 2 seeded Texas, provided upsets don’t occur. The Pac-10 teams represent a small majority, yet with each team seeded in the top-10, anything is possible. Contact the sports reporter at jessethomas@dailyemerald.com. UConn keeps top seed despite loss Mel Greenberg Knight Ridder Newspapers PHILADELPHIA — Despite the loss to Villanova that ended Con necticut's record 70-game winning streak last week, the Huskies were still No. 1 Sunday when the 64-team women's NCAA Tournament field was announced. The Huskies received the overall top seeding and were made No. 1 in the East Regional. They remain strong favorites to win the national title. But thanks to last week’s upset, they won’t be the prohibitive fa vorites they were a year ago when they went 39-0. If UConn advances to the Women’s Final Four in Atlanta next month, it might be matched in the semifinals against Louisiana State, which received the No. 1 seeding in the West. The No. 1 seeding in the Mideast went to Tennessee, which will host the regional semifinals and final, while Duke received the top seeding in the Midwest. There were few surprises, if any, among the other 12 teams that re ceived the highest seedings. Texas Tech, Villanova, Purdue and Texas all received No. 2 seedings as projected. North Carolina, Kansas State, Mississippi State and Stanford were named No. 3 seeds. Penn State, Rutgers, Vanderbilt and Ohio State were noneontroversial No. 4 seeds. All season, the Big East Confer ence, which includes UConn, had been likened to the traditionally powerful Southeastern Conference. The validity of that comparison was reflected in the Big East’s matching the SEC with a conference-record seven teams in the field. Miami, despite being relatively low in the Ratings Percentage In dex at 67, helped itself by advanc ing to the Big East semifinals with an upset of Rutgers before losing to Villanova. The RPI is used to help pick at-large teams for the NCAA Tournament. Conference USA was a mild sur prise, getting five teams in the field after Texas Christian won the league tournament. Charlotte, the regular-season league champion, had an RPI of 60, according to one published report. Virginia, at 16-13 taken as an at large team, has the most losses of any such team in the history of the women’s tournament. © 2003, The Philadelphia Inquirer. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. 2003 Division I Women's Basketball Championship First and Second Rounds • March 22 a 24 McArthur Court • Eugene, Oregon All session/single game tickets: S12/S6 with student ID For tickets call 346-4461 The NCAA salutes its 360,000 student-athletes participating in 22 sports