×
Wildly bold predictions for the 2025-26 women’s college basketball season

Wildly bold predictions for the 2025-26 women’s college basketball season

Let’s skip the prologue and table-setting here and just jump right in to some hot takes before the upcoming women’s college basketball season begins.

Mikayla Blakes will lead the country in scoring

Last season as a freshman, Blakes topped 50 points in a single game twice and ended the year with an average of 23.3 points per game, which was eighth nationally. Blakes didn’t show any signs of slowing down over the summer, as she led Team USA in scoring at the AmeriCup. The reigning USBWA Tamika Catchings Award winner is heading into a sophomore campaign where she might be asked to score even more points. Vanderbilt’s second and third leading scorers from a year ago — Khamil Pierre and Iyana Moore — are no longer there, and their combined 28.4 field goal attempts per game have to go somewhere. Expect Blakes to put up some eye-popping scoring totals this season as she tries to take Vandy to its third consecutive NCAA Tournament.

Notre Dame will not advance to the Sweet 16

Hannah Hidalgo might average a triple-double and that still might not be good enough to put Notre Dame in contention for an ACC title or a top 16 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Top to bottom, this roster just isn’t as good as the ones the Fighting Irish have had over the past few seasons. The post depth they had last season is gone and so are two superb guards, one of whom was a top five WNBA Draft pick last spring and another who will be this spring. Niele Ivey has taken the Irish to four consecutive Sweet 16s, but never any further. It’ll be a surprise if this squad makes the second weekend of March Madness this year.

Clemson will make the NCAA Tournament

The Tigers exited last spring’s portal season as a clear winner After a strong finish to last season, which included an ACC Tournament win over Stanford, Clemson added several talented transfers that should help them in a big way in Shawn Poppie’s second season at the helm. They added players with experience in the ACC like Rusne Augustinaite and Demeara Hinds, a shooter in Taylor Johnson-Matthews who averaged 14.5 points per game for DePaul, and Rachael Rose from Wofford who was third in the nation in scoring in the 2023-24 season. Rose was also named to the watchlist for the Lieberman Award this month.

Hannah Kohn and Mia Moore — who both shot north of 35 percent from behind the arc last season — also return for the Tigers. Two ESPN top 100 recruits join Poppie’s squad as well. In an ACC that seems wide open in the middle, Clemson should be good enough to grab a March Madness bid.

The A-10 will be a three-bid league

This nearly happened last season but Saint Joseph’s was one of the First Four Out and got left on the bubble.

The Ivy League shouldn’t be as deep this season as it was last year and the Big East doesn’t look that much improved as a whole. Simply put, the bids will be there for a strong mid-major league to grab. Richmond is starting the season with all the hype as a preseason AP Top 25 team after beating Georgia Tech in the NCAA Tournament last season, and reigning A-10 Tournament champion George Mason should have a strong team as well.

Then there’s Davidson, which won a program-best 13 conference games last season. The Wildcats return their top two players in Charlisse Dunn and Katie Donovan, and Gayle Fulks has assembled a talented roster around them that is full of international flair — one that should be capable of helping this program take a historic next step.

Raven Johnson will average career-highs in points and assists

In three-and-some-change seasons at South Carolina, Johnson has never averaged more than 30 minutes per game. That could change this year for a few reasons. One, she is the most veteran player on a roster that is meshing in transfers and freshmen, and as the point guard, she’ll often be tasked with helping put those new players in a position to succeed. Second, because of the injuries that have hit South Carolina, Johnson might be asked to pick up more of the scoring load. The bars here aren’t all that high either. If Johnson averages nine points and five assists per game, this prediction will be true.

A Power 4 head coach gets fired before conference tournaments begin

Have y’all seen what’s happening in college football this year? By mid-October, we’ve seen 12 FBS coach openings and there are many more to come. Last year, across all sports but especially in women’s college basketball, many athletic directors were hesitant to make big changes because of the uncertainty of the House Settlement. Everything associated with that is now known and expectations are clearer. And if football has shown us anything, athletic directors aren’t afraid of facing the big buyout figures that come with pulling the plug early on a coaching tenure.

Those amounts in football dwarf the ones in women’s basketball, which is to say that firing a women’s basketball coach early will be an easier pill to swallow and a smaller check to write. At Power 4 programs that really care about the sport and are invested in it, we could see an AD make a change at head coach by February. Taking the logic some ADs use with football, there would be two advantages to making an early change: first, that program would be first-to-market, and second, they could have their new coach installed and set up by the time the transfer portal window opens.

MiLaysia Fulwiley will come off the bench more often than she starts at LSU

Here’s a recent quote from Kim Mulkey: “Learning point guard is probably a little challenging right now because (Fulwiley has) always been the recipient of the pass on the wing and now I’m trying to get her to do what Jada does. Jada has been a point guard all her life. I want (Fulwiley) to be able to just go to either position comfortably and she’s not comfortable yet.”

Couple that comment with some others that Mulkey has made this preseason about Fulwiley still growing and not being quite ready to play point guard full-time. Plus, two incredibly plugged-in LSU reporters — Reed Darcey and Cory Diaz — are projecting that Fulwiley won’t be a starter initially. Time will tell if Fulwiley’s role changes as the season progresses, but it seems like she’ll start it by coming off the bench.

A few more quick ones here with brief explanations…

  • Lauren Betts will be the National Player of the Year

She nearly won this award last year before JuJu Watkins had a superb February, which included a pair of wins over Betts’ Bruins.

  • Oklahoma State will win the Big 12

This conference race seems wide open and Jacie Hoyt has the pieces around Stailee Heard for the Cowgirls to take another big step forward.

  • The SEC and ACC will combine for 20 NCAA Tournament bids

Let’s say 11 for the SEC and nine for the ACC.

  • Gonzaga’s Allie Turner will lead the nation in made 3-pointers

She was seventh last season as a freshman and will likely pick up more of the scoring load for the Zags this season with Yvonne Ejim gone.

  • Stanford will return to the NCAA Tournament. Cal will not.

The Cardinal brought in one of the best freshmen classes in the country and should find their way to a March Madness appearance this season. The Golden Bears lost four of their five top scorers from a season ago and didn’t make any major portal moves to replace them.

  • We’ll see three head coaching changes in the SEC

Our three last season were Missouri, Arkansas and Auburn. For reasons explained above, some ADs that were hesitant last year to make a change might be more willing to do so this year.

  • Duke will win the regular season and conference tournament titles in the ACC

Four of five starters return and so does Toby Fournier, who won ACC Rookie of the Year while coming off the bench. The Blue Devils then essentially added three McDonald’s All-Americans to their rotation with two players returning from injuries and freshman Emilee Skinner arriving in Durham. Their toughest challenge to repeat as ACC champs might be their closest neighbors, UNC and N.C. State.

  • Navy will make the NCAA Tournament

This might not seem all that bold of a prediction considering the Midshipmen won 11 games in the Patriot League last season and are the preseason favorites to win the conference this year, but it’s been a long time since Navy went dancing — not since 2013. Still, last season was their best yet under Tim Taylor and almost everyone from that team is back, including Zanai Barnett-Gay, who averaged 19.2 points, 7.8 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game last season.

Source link
#Wildly #bold #predictions #womens #college #basketball #season

As the IPL enters its second week, last year’s finalists, Royal Challengers Bangalore and Punjab Kings, have made a definite statement that this year too, they will be tough to stop. The defending champions Bengaluru started with a bang, making easy meat of Sunrisers Hyderabad, and the Punjab boys have played as if they were never away. Rajasthan Royals too seem to have found new wings under young Riyan Parag. Delhi Capitals, as always, will be in the mix. So too Mumbai Indians, who, as usual, will stumble at the start and then come back strong in the second half of the season.

The teams that have lost both their games so far are the former champions Chennai Super Kings, Gujarat Titans and Kolkata Knight Riders. The teams will have to get their attack right, as early-season pitches are usually good for batting, with the ball coming on nicely. So, while the batters are making merry, it’s also been seen that when there’s a bit of spice in the pitch, like in Guwahati, the batters are all at sea. They are so used to getting on the front foot even before the ball is bowled that, when it rises at them, they struggle to make contact. The spinners haven’t found much joy yet and may have to wait until next month, when the pitches lose their freshness and, with increasing heat, become drier, helping the ball grip and turn.

The Kolkata and Hyderabad teams have struggled a bit with their bowling, and there’s been understandable criticism of their star players not being available to bowl. It’s been a long season for most countries, and the bowlers have borne the load, carrying injuries of some kind. That’s part of sport. However, knowing when the IPL starts and the recovery time needed, it is only fair that a player not fit from day one should withdraw and give the franchise the chance to pick someone else who will be available from the first match itself.

To suggest that the franchise was ‘informed before’ is not a great excuse. And ‘informed before’ is how much before the opening day of the tournament? Playing for the country is paramount and comes before franchise cricket, but don’t the franchises, who open not just their wallets but also their hearts to players and often their families, deserve full commitment? It is also worth remembering that a bowler can bowl only four overs in a match, and if they have bowled a similar number of deliveries in practice without issue, what is stopping them from doing so in the game? As a bowler, you are expected to bowl 56 overs across 14 league games over two months, and, if your team reaches the final, perhaps another two or three games and 12 more overs. C’mon, for a generation that keeps talking about how fit they are, that’s no load at all. Four overs in a match, that too not in one stretch, and that is too much for the body? Man, if the body is that fragile, then best to give it two more months’ rest, isn’t it?

The IPL has been a cash cow not just for the overseas players but for their Boards too. Does the average Indian fan know that Cricket Boards get 10% of the fee a player from their country is bought for? It is not clear whether the BCCI or the franchise pays this commission for issuing the No Objection Certificate.

So, to put this in perspective, over the last couple of seasons, there have been 16 players from Australia bought by the different franchises for a total of Rs. 121.65 crore. There are 12 England players bought at Rs. 68 crore, and from New Zealand, another 12 players for over Rs. 33 crore; from South Africa, 17 players taking home around Rs. 71 crore. There are eight players from West Indies taking around Rs. 59 crore. Do the calculations, and each cricket Board is making a tidy sum just to issue an email saying they have no objection to their player playing in the IPL.

No other T20 league in the world, which has overseas players, pays a single dime to the Boards of the overseas players in their leagues. Not even the Hundred, which had an auction for the first time, since four out of the six teams had Indian owners, so why not milk the cash cow?

We in India love cricket and love the cricketers even more. And yes, there will be insurance for the players, so perhaps the franchise won’t go out of pocket if a player does not play all the games. But surely the time has come for the franchises to get tough and demand some bang for the buck they are giving the player.

Maybe the BCCI needs to step in and, as they have done by banning overseas players for two years for pulling out after being bought at the auction, introduce something similar for players who are not available from the first game of the tournament unless they are on national duty. This will send a strong message to those who think they can take Indian cricket for granted.

Published on Apr 07, 2026

#Sunil #Gavaskar #BCCI #similar #twoyear #bans #players #unavailable #game #national #duty">Sunil Gavaskar: Maybe BCCI can consider something similar to two-year bans for players unavailable from game one unless out on national duty  As the IPL enters its second week, last year’s finalists, Royal Challengers Bangalore and Punjab Kings, have made a definite statement that this year too, they will be tough to stop. The defending champions Bengaluru started with a bang, making easy meat of Sunrisers Hyderabad, and the Punjab boys have played as if they were never away. Rajasthan Royals too seem to have found new wings under young Riyan Parag. Delhi Capitals, as always, will be in the mix. So too Mumbai Indians, who, as usual, will stumble at the start and then come back strong in the second half of the season.The teams that have lost both their games so far are the former champions Chennai Super Kings, Gujarat Titans and Kolkata Knight Riders. The teams will have to get their attack right, as early-season pitches are usually good for batting, with the ball coming on nicely. So, while the batters are making merry, it’s also been seen that when there’s a bit of spice in the pitch, like in Guwahati, the batters are all at sea. They are so used to getting on the front foot even before the ball is bowled that, when it rises at them, they struggle to make contact. The spinners haven’t found much joy yet and may have to wait until next month, when the pitches lose their freshness and, with increasing heat, become drier, helping the ball grip and turn.The Kolkata and Hyderabad teams have struggled a bit with their bowling, and there’s been understandable criticism of their star players not being available to bowl. It’s been a long season for most countries, and the bowlers have borne the load, carrying injuries of some kind. That’s part of sport. However, knowing when the IPL starts and the recovery time needed, it is only fair that a player not fit from day one should withdraw and give the franchise the chance to pick someone else who will be available from the first match itself.To suggest that the franchise was ‘informed before’ is not a great excuse. And ‘informed before’ is how much before the opening day of the tournament? Playing for the country is paramount and comes before franchise cricket, but don’t the franchises, who open not just their wallets but also their hearts to players and often their families, deserve full commitment? It is also worth remembering that a bowler can bowl only four overs in a match, and if they have bowled a similar number of deliveries in practice without issue, what is stopping them from doing so in the game? As a bowler, you are expected to bowl 56 overs across 14 league games over two months, and, if your team reaches the final, perhaps another two or three games and 12 more overs. C’mon, for a generation that keeps talking about how fit they are, that’s no load at all. Four overs in a match, that too not in one stretch, and that is too much for the body? Man, if the body is that fragile, then best to give it two more months’ rest, isn’t it?The IPL has been a cash cow not just for the overseas players but for their Boards too. Does the average Indian fan know that Cricket Boards get 10% of the fee a player from their country is bought for? It is not clear whether the BCCI or the franchise pays this commission for issuing the No Objection Certificate.So, to put this in perspective, over the last couple of seasons, there have been 16 players from Australia bought by the different franchises for a total of Rs. 121.65 crore. There are 12 England players bought at Rs. 68 crore, and from New Zealand, another 12 players for over Rs. 33 crore; from South Africa, 17 players taking home around Rs. 71 crore. There are eight players from West Indies taking around Rs. 59 crore. Do the calculations, and each cricket Board is making a tidy sum just to issue an email saying they have no objection to their player playing in the IPL.No other T20 league in the world, which has overseas players, pays a single dime to the Boards of the overseas players in their leagues. Not even the Hundred, which had an auction for the first time, since four out of the six teams had Indian owners, so why not milk the cash cow?We in India love cricket and love the cricketers even more. And yes, there will be insurance for the players, so perhaps the franchise won’t go out of pocket if a player does not play all the games. But surely the time has come for the franchises to get tough and demand some bang for the buck they are giving the player.Maybe the BCCI needs to step in and, as they have done by banning overseas players for two years for pulling out after being bought at the auction, introduce something similar for players who are not available from the first game of the tournament unless they are on national duty. This will send a strong message to those who think they can take Indian cricket for granted.Published on Apr 07, 2026  #Sunil #Gavaskar #BCCI #similar #twoyear #bans #players #unavailable #game #national #duty

Deadspin | Victor Wembanyama (rib) exits Spurs’ win; prognosis unknown  Apr 6, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) grabs his left shoulder during the first half against the Philadelphia 76ers at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images   San Antonio star center Victor Wembanyama missed the second half of the Spurs’ Monday game against the Philadelphia 76ers after sustaining a left rib contusion during a second-quarter collision with the 76ers’ Paul George.  The status of the two-time All-Star moving forward was uncertain.  Wembanyama went to the Spurs’ locker room twice in the second period after the collision but finished the half on the court.  Following San Antonio’s 115-102 victory, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, “At halftime, I was told he wasn’t coming back. I haven’t heard anything else up to this point. I think it would be a positive that he felt like he could come back, and he played the last four or five minutes of the half. So, that’s a positive from my perspective.”   Wembanyama scored 17 points, grabbed five rebounds and blocked three shots in officially 16 minutes of court time, which counts as an official game for the purpose of postseason award consideration.  Wembanyama, 22, is in the mix for Most Valuable Player in his third year in the NBA. He is now averaging 24.8 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and a league-high 3.1 blocks per game.  Monday was Wembanyama’s 64th game of the season, including the NBA Cup final, which otherwise doesn’t count toward players’ stats. Players must appear in 65 games to qualify for postseason awards. The Spurs have three games remaining after Monday.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Victor #Wembanyama #rib #exits #Spurs #win #prognosis #unknownApr 6, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) grabs his left shoulder during the first half against the Philadelphia 76ers at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

San Antonio star center Victor Wembanyama missed the second half of the Spurs’ Monday game against the Philadelphia 76ers after sustaining a left rib contusion during a second-quarter collision with the 76ers’ Paul George.

The status of the two-time All-Star moving forward was uncertain.

Wembanyama went to the Spurs’ locker room twice in the second period after the collision but finished the half on the court.


Following San Antonio’s 115-102 victory, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, “At halftime, I was told he wasn’t coming back. I haven’t heard anything else up to this point. I think it would be a positive that he felt like he could come back, and he played the last four or five minutes of the half. So, that’s a positive from my perspective.”

Wembanyama scored 17 points, grabbed five rebounds and blocked three shots in officially 16 minutes of court time, which counts as an official game for the purpose of postseason award consideration.

Wembanyama, 22, is in the mix for Most Valuable Player in his third year in the NBA. He is now averaging 24.8 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and a league-high 3.1 blocks per game.

Monday was Wembanyama’s 64th game of the season, including the NBA Cup final, which otherwise doesn’t count toward players’ stats. Players must appear in 65 games to qualify for postseason awards. The Spurs have three games remaining after Monday.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Victor #Wembanyama #rib #exits #Spurs #win #prognosis #unknown">Deadspin | Victor Wembanyama (rib) exits Spurs’ win; prognosis unknown  Apr 6, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) grabs his left shoulder during the first half against the Philadelphia 76ers at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images   San Antonio star center Victor Wembanyama missed the second half of the Spurs’ Monday game against the Philadelphia 76ers after sustaining a left rib contusion during a second-quarter collision with the 76ers’ Paul George.  The status of the two-time All-Star moving forward was uncertain.  Wembanyama went to the Spurs’ locker room twice in the second period after the collision but finished the half on the court.  Following San Antonio’s 115-102 victory, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, “At halftime, I was told he wasn’t coming back. I haven’t heard anything else up to this point. I think it would be a positive that he felt like he could come back, and he played the last four or five minutes of the half. So, that’s a positive from my perspective.”   Wembanyama scored 17 points, grabbed five rebounds and blocked three shots in officially 16 minutes of court time, which counts as an official game for the purpose of postseason award consideration.  Wembanyama, 22, is in the mix for Most Valuable Player in his third year in the NBA. He is now averaging 24.8 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and a league-high 3.1 blocks per game.  Monday was Wembanyama’s 64th game of the season, including the NBA Cup final, which otherwise doesn’t count toward players’ stats. Players must appear in 65 games to qualify for postseason awards. The Spurs have three games remaining after Monday.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Victor #Wembanyama #rib #exits #Spurs #win #prognosis #unknown

Post Comment