1983 NCAA women's lacrosse tournament

1983 NCAA Division I women's
lacrosse tournament
DatesMay 1983
Teams12
Finals siteFranklin Field
Philadelphia, PA
ChampionsDelaware (1st title)
Runner-upTemple (1st title game)
MOPKaren Emas, Delaware
Attendance2,880 finals
NCAA Division I women's tournaments
«1982 1984»

The 1983 NCAA Women's Lacrosse Championship was the second annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national championship of NCAA women's college lacrosse. The championship game was played at Franklin Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania during May 1983.[1]

The Delaware Blue Hens won their first championship by defeating the Temple Owls in the final, 10–7.

The leading scorer for the tournament was Karen Emas, from Delaware, with 14 goals. Emas was also named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.

Qualification

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Until 1985, there was only one NCAA championship; a Division III title was added in 1985 and a Division II title in 2001. Hence, all NCAA women's lacrosse programs were eligible for this championship. A total of 12 teams were invited to contest the tournament, expanding on the 2 teams from the previous year. Eleven teams made their debuts in the NCAA tournament this year.

Team Appearance Last Bid Record
Dartmouth 1st Never 8-5
Delaware 1st Never 14-2
Harvard 1st Never 11-3-1
Loyola (MD) 1st Never 7-3-1
Maryland 1st Never 11-2-1
Massachusetts 2nd 1982 11-1-1
Northwestern 1st Never 8-2
Penn 1st Never 8-4
Penn State 1st Never 12-1
Princeton 1st Never 7-6
Temple 1st Never 11-1-3
William & Mary 1st Never 8-5

Tournament bracket

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First round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
Franklin Field
Philadelphia, PA
            
1 Temple 16
Princeton 6
Princeton 12
Dartmouth 10
1 Temple 10
4 Massachusetts 4
4 Massachusetts 7
Harvard 6
Harvard 9
Northwestern 4
1 Temple 7
Delaware 10
3 Maryland 8
Delaware 11
Delaware 11
William & Mary 7
Delaware 7
2 Penn State 5
Third place
2 Penn State 12 4 Massachusetts 6
Penn 2 2 Penn State (OT) 7
Penn 9
Loyola (MD) 5

Tournament outstanding players

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship Results" (PDF). NCAA. NCAA.org. Retrieved March 11, 2015.