
NCAA Women's Basketball Bracket 2015: Selection Show TV, Live Stream Schedule
Monday marks the grand reveal of the NCAA tournament's bracket, which will feature several storied juggernauts given prominent seeding.
The night after Selection Sunday sends hoops fans into a frenzy, another bracket will unfold on TV. Having never heard of ladies first, the women will wait a day after the men to learn their tournament fate.
Here's a look ahead at the women's basketball bracket unveiling.
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Selection Show Information
Date: Monday, March 16
Time: 7 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN
Live Stream: WatchESPN
Preview

Despite entering the tournament a perfect 30-0, Princeton is not generating any buzz as a top-seed candidate.
Averaging a 24.9-point margin of victory, the Tigers won 28 of their games by double digits. Guard Blake Dietrick leads the way with 14.9 points and 5.1 assists per game, and she is one of four regulars who posted more than 10 points per contest.
| PTS | 75.8 | 50.9 |
| FG % | 49.3 | 33.3 |
| REB | 42.0 | 30.8 |
| AST | 17.1 | 9.5 |
| BLK | 4.6 | 2.7 |
After sitting on the wrong end of Princeton's 30th victory, Penn coach Mike McLaughlin tipped his hat to the Ivy League champions, via The Associated Press' Doug Feinberg.
"I've always said to anyone who asked me I think they're really good," McLaughlin said. "I think they are right where they need to be. They are talented top to bottom. They are very deep, well coached, play the right way. I think they are very good."
The Tigers, however, are currently slotted No. 13 in the AP poll. ESPN.com's Charlie Creme projects them to settle for a No. 5 seed despite their flawless ledger.
It seems cruel for a team that couldn't have accomplished anything more this season, but the Tigers have yet to face a team currently seated in the top 25. While a 104-33 victory looks incredible, its merit dwindles when netted against 4-25 Portland.

According to FiveThirthyEight's Carl Bialik, seven teams entered the tournament undefeated over the last seven years. All of them earned a No. 1 seed, and Notre Dame—which lost last year's championship to the perfect UConn Huskies—was the only team not to win it all.
Bialik, however, also drew parallels to other squads that struggled against mightier competition:
"Princeton is more similar historically to three undefeated teams in the 1990s that were seeded No. 8 or worse and lost in the first round: Vermont in 1992 and 1993, and 1998 Liberty, which was knocked out by fellow undefeated team Tennessee. But Princeton will probably do better than those three teams did — it likely will be ranked higher in the final pre-tournament AP poll, and it has a greater margin of victory.
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Last year's final representatives proved fallible during the season, but Notre Dame and UConn still stand tall as tournament favorites.
Although the Fighting Irish again lost to the Huskies this season, they're 10-0 against other ranked opponents, earning them the NCAA's top spot in RPI. After conquering the loaded ACC behind espnW Player of the Year Jewell Loyd, they're a safe bet to return to the Final Four.
The Huskies have yet to lose in regulation, with their only loss coming in overtime against No. 14 Stanford, which they eliminated from last year's Final Four. Having bested Notre Dame, Duke and fellow No. 1 seed South Carolina by a combined 74 points, Geno Auriemma's crew is poised to compete for its third straight title.



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