2000–01 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team

2000–01 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball
NCAA tournament National Champions
Big East regular season co-champions
ConferenceBig East Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
APNo. 2
Record34–2 (15–1 Big East)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
Home arenaEdmund P. Joyce Center
2000–01 Big East Conference women's basketball standings
Conf. Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 2 Notre Dame 15 1   .938 34 2   .944
No. 1 Connecticut 15 1   .938 32 3   .914
No. 11 Rutgers 13 3   .813 23 8   .742
Villanova 11 5   .688 22 9   .710
Virginia Tech 11 5   .688 22 9   .710
Seton Hall 9 7   .563 16 12   .571
Boston College 7 9   .438 14 15   .483
Georgetown 6 10   .375 17 15   .531
Miami (FL) 6 10   .375 13 15   .464
Syracuse 6 10   .375 12 15   .444
Providence 4 12   .250 11 17   .393
Pittsburgh 3 13   .188 9 18   .333
St. John's 3 13   .188 8 20   .286
West Virginia 3 13   .188 5 22   .185
† 2001 Big East Tournament winner
As of April 2, 2001
Rankings from AP poll

The 2000–01 Notre Dame Fighting Irish women's basketball team represented the University of Notre Dame during the 2000–01 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Fighting Irish, led by fourteenth-year head coach Muffet McGraw, played their home games at Edmund P. Joyce Center as members of the Big East Conference. The Irish finished the season 34–2, 15–1 in Big East play to earn a share of the regular season championship. They defeated Virginia and Florida State before losing to UConn in the Big East Women's Tournament championship. Notre Dame received an at-large bid as the No. 1 seed in the Midwest (Denver) region. They defeated Alcorn State and Michigan to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. There they defeated Utah and Vanderbilt to advance to the Final Four. The Fighting Irish exacted some revenge over the No. 1 UConn Huskies in the Final Four, then defeated the No. 3 seed from the Mideast region, 9th ranked Purdue, in the national championship. The Irish edged the Boilermakers 68–66 to capture the program's first national title.

The Fighting Irish opened the season ranked No. 6 in the AP poll. After 18 wins without a defeat, including a comfortable win over No. 1 UConn, Notre Dame rose to the No. 1 ranking. The team went on to win their first 23 games before losing 54–53 at Rutgers.

Senior center Ruth Riley was named Big East Player of the Year and Naismith Player of the Year, and earned her second straight First-team All-American honor.