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The ACC–SEC Challenge is an in-season NCAA Division I college basketball series that matches men's and women's teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and the Southeastern Conference (SEC). It replaced the ACC–Big Ten Challenge and the Big 12/SEC Challenge which both ended in 2022.
14 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (women) 55: 11 NC State Wolfpack (women) 51 Greensboro, North Carolina: Greensboro Coliseum: ACC Tournament (Women's) March 16 NC State Wolfpack: 84: 4 North Carolina Tar Heels 76 Washington, D.C. Capital One Arena: ACC Tournament (Men's) March 23 No Team – No Team – Bristol, Connecticut ESPN Studios – March ...
After the regular season, the 2025 ACC women's basketball tournament promises to be held at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, NC for the 25th time in 26 years (since 1998). [1] This promises to be the first season where eighteen teams compete in the conference, following the additions of California , SMU , and Stanford on July 1, 2024.
The ACC/Big Ten Challenge and SEC/Big 12 Challenge will both be ending this season after ESPN loses broadcast rights to Big Ten games. SEC/ACC Challenge for men’s and women’s college ...
The 2023 NCAA women's basketball tournament continued to break records this past weekend during the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight. ESPN reported that an average of 1.2 million people watched each of ...
The Albany 2 regional final between Iowa and LSU, a rematch of the previous year's national championship game drew the largest audience ever for a women's college basketball game as well as the most watched college basketball game in the 45-year history of ESPN. [4]
Many of the challenge games hosted by Big Ten schools are televised live by the Big Ten Network. Games hosted by ACC schools are televised by the ACC Network. On November 28, 2022, amid ESPN losing its media rights to the Big Ten, it was announced that both the men's and women's series would be discontinued after the 2022–23 season.
The NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament, sometimes referred to as Women's March Madness, [1] is a single-elimination tournament played each spring in the United States, currently featuring 68 women's college basketball teams from the Division I level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), to determine the national championship.