The NCAA women's basketball tournament is going to a two-host format for its regional rounds next year with eight teams apiece playing in Seattle and Greenville, South Carolina.
Each site will host two regional semifinal games March 24 and two more on March 25. At each location, one regional championship will be March 26 and another on March 27.
In the past, the NCAA tournament had four regional sites.
Rick Nixon, the NCAA associate director for media, said the committee announced the eventual switch to two regional sites in 2019 and named the host cities in 2020 in an attempt to maintain neutral sites for the regional rounds. The NCAA men's regionals remain at four sites.
The NCAA tournament bracket will be revealed March 12, the same day that the men's tournament announces its teams.
The First Four opening-round women's games will take place March 15-16 and will be conducted on campuses of teams seeded among the top 16. All sites bidding for round-of-64 and round-of-32 games must agree to the possibility of hosting a First Four game.
Ball State athletic director Beth Goetz will serve as the NCAA Division I women's basketball chair for the 2022-23 school year. Oregon deputy athletic director Lisa Peterson is vice chair and will take over as chair in 2023-24.
Planning for the 2023 championship also included updates on operations, officiating, travel, ticketing, branding, broadcast, digital/social and media. The committee received a report on planning for the 2023 Women's Final Four in Dallas, which will host the second joint Division I, II and III women's basketball national championship games at the American Airlines Center over two days.
The committee also received an update on the Women's Final Four site selection process, which will conclude with the announcement of the 2027-31 sites in November.