Alabama continues to rise in USA TODAY Sports Women’s Basketball Coaches Poll

Kristy Curry’s Alabama team is 6-0 for the second year in a row. Here’s where the Crimson Tide are ranked in this week’s Women’s Basketball Coaches Poll.

Coach Kristy Curry and the Alabama Crimson Tide women’s basketball team went 3-0 last week to improve to 6-0 overall for the season and continue its climb up the new USA TODAY Sports Women’s Basketball Coaches Poll, released Tuesday.

Alabama rose one spot to No. 21 and is ranked just behind the Ole Miss Rebels at No. 20. The Crimson Tide jumped ahead of the Louisville Cardinals, who fell four spots to No. 22.

The Tide beat Norfolk State 68-58 last Wednesday in Coleman Coliseum, then blew out Alcorn State 88-59 the following day. They beat UL Monroe 75-52 over the weekend in Louisiana.

Alabama’s 6-0 start ties last season’s start, which led to them earning a berth in the NCAA Tournament in March. They beat Florida State for their first NCAA Tournament win since 2021 before losing to No. 1 seed Texas in the second round in Austin.

Alabama will play Alabama State Monday, Nov. 25 in the Emerald Coast Classic in Florida before taking on either UAB or the Clemson Tigers the following day in the tournament’s championship or runner-up game. Tipoff for the Crimson Tide’s game against Alabama State is set for 1:30 p.m. CT and can be seen on FloSports.

Through six games, Sarah Ashlee Barker leads Alabama in scoring with 18.7 points per game, followed by Aaliyah Nye at 15 points per game. Zaay Green is third with 13.3 per game.

Coach Dawn Staley and the defending national champion South Carolina Gamecocks (4-0) remained atop the polls. UConn was No. 2 with USC No. 3. As with last week, seven SEC teams were ranked in the Coaches Poll. Texas stayed at No. 4 with Kim Mulkey’s LSU Tigers at No. 7 and the Oklahoma Sooners at No. 9. The Kentucky Wildcats moved up three spots to No. 16 with Ole Miss at No. 20.

Full USA TODAY Women’s Basketball Coaches Poll

 

Rank School (Record) Points First Place Votes
1 South Carolina (4-0) 747 28
2 Connecticut (3-0) 716 1
3 Southern California (4-0) 684 1
4 Texas (3-0) 656
5 Notre Dame (4-0) 630
6 UCLA (4-0) 600
7 LSU (5-0) 556
8 Iowa State (4-0) 535
9 Oklahoma (3-0) 517
10 Kansas State (4-0) 477
11 Ohio State Buckeyes (3-0) 425
12 West Virginia (4-0) 411
13 Maryland (5-0) 401
14 Duke (4-1) 325
15 North Carolina (3-1) 277
16 Kentucky (5-0) 272
17 Baylor (3-1) 251
18 North Carolina State (2-2) 247
19 Nebraska (4-0) 183
20 Ole Miss (3-1) 145
21 Alabama (6-0) 138
22 Louisville (2-2) 113
23 Illinois (4-0) 110
24 TCU (4-0) 92
25 Oregon (24-10) 66

Schools Dropped Out

No. 23 Stanford; No. 25 South Dakota State

Others Receiving Votes

Iowa 33; Tennessee 32; Florida State 29; South Dakota State 22; Mississippi State 14; Stanford 13; Penn State 10; Auburn 7; Michigan State 6; Middle Tennessee 3; Richmond 2; Creighton 2; Saint Joseph’s 1; Michigan 1; Fairfield 1

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Lindsay Gottlieb describes the new world of women’s college basketball

Lindsay Gottlieb went on Richard Deitsch’s sports media podcast to explain how a coach handles different media pressures in modern women’s basketball.

USC women’s basketball coach Lindsay Gottlieb was a guest on Richard Deitsch’s newest sports media podcast. For a USC program which has attained national relevance, and is now a bigger point of focus for Trojan fans who are suffering through a brutal football season, Gottlieb’s media-specific insights are fascinating to contemplate.

This podcast deals a little with the current USC team, but as a media-oriented show, it focuses mostly on how Gottlieb and USC are handling the media spotlight and its mixture of challenges and opportunities.

Lindsay Gottlieb discusses her interaction with player agents, the role of a general manager within the USC women’s hoops program, the overall program infrastructure, helping players build their brand and maximize both exposure and revenue, and the larger attempt to put basketball first and maintain a team-centered culture amid the commercial pressures of the sport.

Gottlieb also went into detail in explaining the challenge and complexity of scheduling national television games such as the USC-UConn game on Dec. 21 on Fox. That game will have an NFL lead-in, offering considerable visibility to USC women’s basketball.

Gottlieb also talked about the need to balance local and national media obligations, being available for Los Angeles outlets but also being willing to set aside time in a busy day for national media organizations interested in the program due to its prominence and the brilliance of superstar JuJu Watkins.

There’s so much to consider in this discussion. It’s a peek behind the curtain and a look inside the juggling act Gottlieb and other high-profile coaches have to pull off in modern women’s basketball.

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USC women’s basketball makes history in blowout win

The USC Trojans trouncing Cal State Northridge on Tuesday was expected, but the way they did it was far from ordinary. This performance stood out.

The USC Trojans women’s basketball team is good. Really good. It picked up its third win in as many games this season in super fashion with a 124-39 romp over Cal State Northridge. JuJu Watkins and the rest of the Trojans thrived. The 124-point total broke the school’s single-game scoring record. The 85-point win set the largest margin of victory — men’s or women’s — for Trojans basketball.

The Trojans were led by standout sophomore guard JuJu Watkins, who led all scorers with 21 points and 9 assists. All 13 Trojans who played scored. Six players, including forward Kiki Iriafen (15), scored in double digits.

It was an all-around win for the Trojans. Offensively, they shot 60.8% from the floor and 47.2% beyond the arc while grabbing 15 offensive rebounds. Defensively, the team forced 43 turnovers, four more turnovers than Cal State Northridge had points.

As part of the historic night, USC head coach Lindsay Gottlieb picked up her 300th career win, which the team celebrated after the blowout.

The Trojans are a team to keep an eye on this season. Even against weak opponents, with the result known before the tip, this team can create a spectacle night in and night out.

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Alabama makes noticeable jump in USA TODAY Sports women’s basketball coaches poll

Check out where Kristy Curry’s Alabama team is ranked in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll after their 3-0 start.

After starting the season 3-0, coach Kristy Curry and the Alabama Crimson Tide women’s basketball team made a nice leap forward in the new USA TODAY Sports women’s basketball coaches poll, released Tuesday.

Alabama rose three spots to No. 22, one spot behind No. 21 Ole Miss and one spot ahead of No. 23 Stanford. The Crimson Tide defeated New Orleans, 115-53, in their regular season opener on Nov. 4 at Coleman Coliseum, then won 84-59 at Alabama A&M before taking down Troy, 94-71.

Zaay Green led Alabama with 24 points in 31 minutes against the Trojans on Sunday at Coleman Coliseum. Green is one of three seniors that have been in double figures for the Crimson Tide this season. Aaliyah Nye has averaged 18.3 points per game with Sarah Ashlee Barker at 18 and Green at 16.7.

It’s the second season in a row that Alabama has won its first three games. A year ago, the Tide started the season 6-0 and eventually played their way into the NCAA Tournament in March. They beat Florida State for their first NCAA Tournament win since 2021 before losing to No. 1 seed Texas in the second round in Austin.

Entering this season, Alabama was ranked in the preseason AP Top 25 poll for the first time since 1998. The Crimson Tide also checked in at No. 22 in the new AP poll this week.

Alabama hosts Norfolk State Wednesday night in Coleman Coliseum. Tipoff is set for 6 p.m. The game can be seen on SEC Network+.

The defending national champion South Carolina Gamecocks and coach Dawn Staley remained atop the polls. A total of seven SEC teams are ranked in the coaches poll. In addition to South Carolina and Alabama, Texas is ranked No. 4 with Kim Mulkey’s LSU Tigers at No. 7 and the Oklahoma Sooners at No. 9.

The Kentucky Wildcats are ranked No. 19 with Ole Miss No. 21.

Full USA TODAY Women’s Basketball Coaches Poll

Ranking Team Record Points
1 South Carolina Gamecocks 2-0 772 (29)
2 UConn Huskies 2-0 740 (1)
3 USC Trojans 2-0 707 (1)
4 Texas Longhorns 2-0 674
5 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 1-0 652
6 UCLA Bruins 2-0 598
7 LSU Tigers 2-0 586
8 Iowa State Cyclones 3-0 547
9 Oklahoma Sooners 2-0 516
10 NC State Wolfpack 1-1 476
11 Kansas State Wildcats 2-0 462
12 Ohio State Buckeyes 1-0 439
13 West Virginia Mountaineers 2-0 382
14 Maryland Terrapins 3-0 378
15 North Carolina Tar Heels 2-0 327
16 Duke Blue Devils 2-1 281
17 Baylor Bears 1-1 256
18 Louisville Cardinals 1-1 206
19 Kentucky Wildcats 2-0 165
20 Nebraska Cornhuskers 2-0 158
21 Ole Miss Rebels 1-1 145
22 Alabama Crimson Tide 3-0 123
23 Stanford Cardinal 3-0 99
24 Illinois Fighting Illini 2-0 87
25 South Dakota State Jackrabbits 2-0 50

Schools Dropped Out

No. 19 Florida State; No. 20 Creighton; No. 24 Indiana;

Others Receiving Votes

Oregon 42; Florida State 38; Iowa 34; Tennessee 33; Utah 17; Creighton 11; Auburn 11; TCU 10; Michigan State 9; Middle Tennessee 8; Indiana 8; Fairfield 7; UNLV 6; Michigan 4; Penn State 3; Mississippi State 3; Saint Joseph’s 2; Gonzaga 2; Richmond 1; Columbia 1;

List Of Voters

The USA TODAY Sports Board of Coaches is made up of 31 head coaches at Division I institutions. All are members of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association. The board for the 2024-25 season: Ashleen Bracey, Illinois-Chicago; Jen Brown, Queens University; Dan Burt, Duquesne; Fred Chmiel, Bowling Green; Janell Crayton Del Rosario, Bethune-Cookman; Denise Dillon, Villanova; Carrie Eighmey, South Dakota; Dalila Eshe, Yale; Heather Ezell, Wyoming; Bill Fennelly, Iowa State; Cindy Fisher, San Diego; Aqua Franklin, Lamar; Ty Grace, Howard; Hana Haden, Georgia Southern; Johnnie Harris, Auburn; Brian Holsinger, Montana; Rick Insell, Middle Tennessee; Renee Jimenez, UC Santa Barbara; Chris Kielsmeier, Cleveland State; Mike Lane, NJIT; Amy Mallon, Drexel; Mike McGuire, Radford; Kim McNeill, East Carolina; Lynn Milligan, Rider; Dan Nielson, Utah Valley; Shawn Poppie, Clemson; Samantha Quigley Smith, Southern Illinois-Edwardsville; Missy Traversi, Army; Jonathan Tsipis, Western Carolina; Way Veney, Central Connecticut State; Coquese Washington, Rutgers.

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Notre Dame’s Olivia Miles named ACC Player of the Week

Notre Dame’s Olivia Miles has had a special start to the season.

Women’s basketball player [autotag]Olivia Miles[/autotag] has taken home ACC Player of the Week honors for the No. 6 Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

The senior guard gets the honors for the third time — her first since December 2022.

She earned it with 20 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists against Mercyhurst in her first game back after recovering from a torn ACL. That’s her fourth career triple-double and it came in a 105-61 win.

Miles then had 17 points, 5 rebounds, 2 steals, an assist and a block against Purdue as Notre Dame beat the Boilermakers 102-58.

Miles was also 7-for-15 from the floor for the Fighting Irish against the Boilermakers, including a 55-foot shot to end the third quarter.

Right now, Miles is the only ACC player to be in the conference’s top 10 for points, rebounds and assists. She’s leading the NCAA with 6.8 assists per game.

Miles has performed another feat — she’s the first NBA, WNBA, men’s or women’s college basketball player to have a 20-point triple-double in their first game back after missing a season due to injury in the last 25 years.

Notre Dame’s next game is at home against James Madison (3-0).

Mar 23, 2024; South Bend, Indiana, USA; Notre Dame Fighting Irish guard Olivia Miles reacts after Notre Dame defeated the Kent State Golden Flashes in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at the Purcell Pavilion. Mandatory Credit: Matt Cashore-Imagn Images

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Notre Dame listed as No. 2 seed in first ESPN women’s bracketology

Hopefully, that can become a No. 1 seed.

Notre Dame got its season off to a proper start Monday with a blowout win over Mercyhurst. This occurred on the eve of ESPN women’s bracketologist Charlie Creme releasing his first bracketology of the season.

Given that the Irish are starting the season as the sixth-ranked team in the country, it should come as no surprise that they’re a No. 2 seed in this initial bracketology. While there surely are a few paths that could make them a No. 1 seed, one in particular would allow them to put their fate in their own hands.

In a separate story, Creme notes that the Irish play both USC and UConn this season. All three of them play each other this season, and one team going 2-0 against the other would lock in a No. 1 seed assuming there aren’t any losses to inferior opponents during the season. Creme also notes that the Irish must beat Texas to get that seed if they lose to both the Trojans and Huskies.

We have four months of this, people. Time to buckle up.

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Kim Mulkey stays hot on recruiting trail, adding five-star to 2025 class

Kim Mulkey stays hot on the recruiting trail, adding a five-star to the 2025 class

[autotag]Kim Mulkey[/autotag] made it a habit of adding talent when she arrived at LSU. Whether it’s on the recruiting trail or the transfer portal, we’ve seen a flurry of high-profile additions in the last few years.

The trend continues with Mulkey adding a five-star to LSU’s 2025 class. Guard [autotag]Zakiyah Johnson[/autotag] committed to the Tigers on Sunday, giving LSU the No. 4 overall prospect in the class per On3.

ESPN is high on Johnson too, ranking her No. 13 overall.

Johnson is a Kentucky native, but nabbing out-of-state talent isn’t an issue for Mulkey and staff. After a national title and another deep tournament run, LSU women’s basketball is a national brand.

Johnson is LSU’s third addition to the 2025 class, joining [autotag]Bella Hines[/autotag] and [autotag]Divine Bourrage. [/autotag]

LSU is hoping Johnson isn’t the last marquee addition. Aaliyah Chavez, the top prospect in the country, remains an LSU target too.

As for the current Tigers, LSU begins its season on Monday night against Eastern Kentucky. Later in the week, LSU hosts a meeting with instate competition Northwestern State.

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Alabama ranked in preseason women’s basketball coaches poll

Check out where Kristy Curry’s Alabama team is ranked in the preseason USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

Thursday saw the release of the women’s basketball USA TODAY Sports preseason coaches poll. Coach Kristy Curry and the Alabama Crimson Tide are ranked No. 25 entering the 2024-25 season.

Curry led Alabama to a 24-10 overall record last season and a berth in the NCAA Tournament. The Crimson Tide defeated Florida State in the first round before falling to the Texas Longhorns, 65-54.

A week ago, Alabama was ranked in the preseason AP Top 25 poll for the first time since 1998. That year, Rick Moody’s Crimson Tide team ranked preseason No. 9 and finished 20-11. Alabama lost in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Dawn Staley and the defending national champion South Carolina Gamecocks took the No. 1 spot in the preseason coaches poll with 27 first-place votes. The Gamecocks went a perfect 38-0 last season and won the national championship over Caitlin Clark and the Iowa Hawkeyes with a roster that included fellow WNBA first-round pick Kamilla Cardoso (No. 3 overall).

UConn was ranked No. 2 behind South Carolina, with the USC Trojans at No. 3 and Texas at No. 4. Notre Dame rounded out the top five.

Other SEC teams ranked in the preseason Top 25 were Kim Mulkey’s LSU Tigers (No. 8), the Oklahoma Sooners (No. 10), the Ole Miss Rebels (No. 21) and the Kentucky Wildcats (No. 22).

Alabama opens the season on Nov. 4 at Coleman Coliseum against the University of New Orleans. Tipoff is scheduled for 5 p.m. CT.

2024-25 Women’s Basketball Preseason Coaches Poll

Rank School (Last Year’s Record) Points First Place Votes
1 South Carolina (38-0) 770 27
2 Connecticut (33-6) 734 3
3 Southern California (29-6) 716 1
4 Texas (33-5) 670
5 Notre Dame (28-7) 629
6 UCLA (27-7) 612
7 LSU (31-6) 567
8 North Carolina State (31-7) 533
9 Iowa State (21-12) 487
10 Oklahoma (23-10) 457
11 Duke (22-12) 449
12 Baylor (26-8) 434
13 Kansas State (26-8) 407
14 Ohio State (26-6) 405
15 West Virginia (25-8) 285
16 North Carolina (20-13) 263
17 Louisville (24-10) 261
18 Maryland (19-14) 254
19 Florida State (23-11) 177
20 Creighton (26-6) 150
21 Mississippi (24-9) 135
22 Kentucky (12-20) 106
23 Nebraska (23-12) 92
24 Indiana (26-6) 75
25 Alabama (24-10) 57

Others receiving votes:

Gonzaga (32-4) 49; TCU (21-12) 37; Stanford (30-6) 32; Tennessee (20-13) 32; Iowa (34-5) 28; Utah (23-11) 25; South Dakota State (27-6) 22; Oregon State (27-8) 21; Princeton (25-5) 18; Colorado (24-10) 15; Virginia Tech (25-8) 10; Illinois (19-15) 9; Middle Tennessee (30-5) 8; Fairfield (31-2) 7; California (19-15) 6; Richmond (29-6) 6; Auburn (20-12) 5; Florida Gulf Coast (29-5) 4; Miami (Fla.) (19-12) 4; UNLV (30-3) 4; South Florida (19-14) 3; George Mason (23-8) 2; Cleveland State (29-6) 1; Michigan (20-14) 1; Saint Joseph’s (28-6)

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USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll WBK preseason top 25 features 7 SEC schools

Florida’s women’s basketball program has some work to do if it wants to crack the top 25 this season while the SEC is well represented in the poll.

The preseason edition of the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll for college women’s basketball was released on Thursday, and much to the chagrin of the Gator Nation, Florida failed to receive any votes.

Last season, the Lady Gators finished 16-16 overall with just a 5-11 record in Southeastern Conference play. Entering the SEC Tournament as a No. 11 seed, they managed to win the first two games — against the 14th-seeded Missouri Tigers and sixth-seeded Vanderbilt Commodores — but succame to the third-seeded Ole Miss Rebels in the quarterfinals.

Florida was bounced from the Women’s Basketball Invitational in the first round by the St. John’s Red Storm in the O’Connell Center to end the campaign.

SEC teams in preseason Coaches Poll

The conference is represented by seven schools among the top 25, headlined by the reigning national champions, the South Carolina Gamecocks, in the top perch, followed by the newly added Texas Longhorns at No. 4 and Oklahoma Sooners at No. 10. The LSU Tigers are sandwiched between the two neophytes at No. 7.

Ole Miss logs in at No. 21 while the Kentucky Wildcats are on their tail at No. 22 and the Alabama Crimson Tide wraps things up at No. 25. The Tennessee Volunteers (32) and Auburn Tigers (5) also earned votes.

Full preseason Coaches Poll

Rank School (Last Year’s Record) Points First Place Votes
1 South Carolina (38-0) 770 27
2 Connecticut (33-6) 734 3
3 Southern California (29-6) 716 1
4 Texas (33-5) 670
5 Notre Dame (28-7) 629
6 UCLA (27-7) 612
7 LSU (31-6) 567
8 North Carolina State (31-7) 533
9 Iowa State (21-12) 487
10 Oklahoma (23-10) 457
11 Duke (22-12) 449
12 Baylor (26-8) 434
13 Kansas State (26-8) 407
14 Ohio State (26-6) 405
15 West Virginia (25-8) 285
16 North Carolina (20-13) 263
17 Louisville (24-10) 261
18 Maryland (19-14) 254
19 Florida State (23-11) 177
20 Creighton (26-6) 150
21 Mississippi (24-9) 135
22 Kentucky (12-20) 106
23 Nebraska (23-12) 92
24 Indiana (26-6) 75
25 Alabama (24-10) 57

Others Receiving Votes

Gonzaga 49; TCU 37; Tennessee 32; Stanford 32; Iowa 28; Utah 25; South Dakota State 22; Oregon State 21; Princeton 18; Colorado 15; Virginia Tech 10; Illinois 9; Middle Tennessee 8; Fairfield 7; Richmond 6; California 6; Auburn 5; UNLV 4; Miami (FL) 4; FGCU 4; South Florida 3; George Mason 2; Saint Joseph’s 1; Michigan 1; Cleveland State 1

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South Carolina takes top spot in preseason women’s basketball coaches poll

The USA TODAY Sports preseason women’s basketball coaches poll was released on Thursday. South Carolina, UConn, and USC are leading the way.

The NCAA women’s basketball season will officially tip-off on Monday, Nov. 4. Caitlin Clark might not be on the hardwood at the collegiate level this season but there is still plenty of exciting action that will take place. It will be up to players like JuJu Watkins of the USC Trojans to carry the torch this season.

The defending national champion South Carolina Gamecocks check in with the No. 1 spot in the USA TODAY Sports preseason coaches poll after finishing with a perfect 38-0 record under Dawn Staley. It was the first time she achieved perfection after coming close in 2020 and 2023 where South Carolina finished with just one loss in each of those seasons. 2020 ended early when the tournament was canceled due to COVID-19 and the 2023 team’s run at perfection was ended by Clark and the Iowa Hawkeyes in the Final Four.

South Carolina is joined by six other teams in the SEC to give them seven altogether. The Gamecocks edged out the UConn Huskies and USC Trojans for the top spot by a substantial margin. These three teams were the only ones to earn first-place votes. UConn will welcome back Paige Bueckers who bypassed the WNBA draft for another run at the title.

2024-25 Women’s Basketball Preseason Coaches Poll

Rank School (Last Year’s Record) Points First Place Votes
1 South Carolina (38-0) 770 27
2 Connecticut (33-6) 734 3
3 Southern California (29-6) 716 1
4 Texas (33-5) 670
5 Notre Dame (28-7) 629
6 UCLA (27-7) 612
7 LSU (31-6) 567
8 North Carolina State (31-7) 533
9 Iowa State (21-12) 487
10 Oklahoma (23-10) 457
11 Duke (22-12) 449
12 Baylor (26-8) 434
13 Kansas State (26-8) 407
14 Ohio State (26-6) 405
15 West Virginia (25-8) 285
16 North Carolina (20-13) 263
17 Louisville (24-10) 261
18 Maryland (19-14) 254
19 Florida State (23-11) 177
20 Creighton (26-6) 150
21 Mississippi (24-9) 135
22 Kentucky (12-20) 106
23 Nebraska (23-12) 92
24 Indiana (26-6) 75
25 Alabama (24-10) 57

Others receiving votes:

Gonzaga (32-4) 49; TCU (21-12) 37; Stanford (30-6) 32; Tennessee (20-13) 32; Iowa (34-5) 28; Utah (23-11) 25; South Dakota State (27-6) 22; Oregon State (27-8) 21; Princeton (25-5) 18; Colorado (24-10) 15; Virginia Tech (25-8) 10; Illinois (19-15) 9; Middle Tennessee (30-5) 8; Fairfield (31-2) 7; California (19-15) 6; Richmond (29-6) 6; Auburn (20-12) 5; Florida Gulf Coast (29-5) 4; Miami (Fla.) (19-12) 4; UNLV (30-3) 4; South Florida (19-14) 3; George Mason (23-8) 2; Cleveland State (29-6) 1; Michigan (20-14) 1; Saint Joseph’s (28-6)

The USA TODAY Sports Board of Coaches is made up of 31 head coaches at Division I institutions. All are members of the Women’s Basketball Coaches Association. The board for the 2024-25 season: Ashleen Bracey, Illinois-Chicago; Jen Brown, Queens University; Dan Burt, Duquesne; Fred Chmiel, Bowling Green; Janell Crayton Del Rosario, Bethune-Cookman; Denise Dillon, Villanova; Carrie Eighmey, South Dakota; Dalila Eshe, Yale; Heather Ezell, Wyoming; Bill Fennelly, Iowa State; Cindy Fisher, San Diego; Aqua Franklin, Lamar; Ty Grace, Howard; Hana Haden, Georgia Southern; Johnnie Harris, Auburn; Brian Holsinger, Montana; Rick Insell, Middle Tennessee; Renee Jimenez, UC Santa Barbara; Chris Kielsmeier, Cleveland State; Mike Lane, NJIT; Amy Mallon, Drexel; Mike McGuire, Radford; Kim McNeill, East Carolina; Lynn Milligan, Rider; Dan Nielson, Utah Valley; Shawn Poppie, Clemson; Samantha Quigley Smith, Southern Illinois-Edwardsville; Missy Traversi, Army; Jonathan Tsipis, Western Carolina; Way Veney, Central Connecticut State; Coquese Washington, Rutgers.