2022–23 NCAA Division I women's basketball season

The 2022–23 NCAA Division I women's basketball season began on November 7, 2022. The regular season ended on March 12, 2023, with the 2023 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament beginning on March 14 and ending with the championship game at American Airlines Center in Dallas on April 2.

Rule changes

The following rule changes will be recommended by the NCAA Basketball Rules Committee to the Playing Rules Oversight Panel for 2022−23 season:

TBD m, m

Season headlines

  • June 21, 2022 – Hartford, which started a transition from Division I to Division III in the 2021–22 school year, was announced as a new member of the D-III Commonwealth Coast Conference (CCC) effective in 2023–24. The CCC press release also confirmed previous reports that Hartford would leave the America East Conference after the 2021–22 season; the Hawks would play the 2022–23 season as a D-I independent.[1]
  • June 24 – Incarnate Word, which had announced a move from the Southland Conference (SLC) to the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), backed out of this move and elected to remain in the SLC.[2]
  • June 30 – The Big Ten Conference announced that UCLA and USC would join from the Pac-12 Conference in 2024, immediately after the current Pac-12 media contracts expire.[3][4]
  • July 11 – The SLC and Lamar jointly announced that Lamar, which had previously planned to leave the WAC in 2023 to return to the SLC, would expedite this move for the 2022–23 school year.[5]
  • July 15 – The WAC announced that starting with the 2023 editions, its men's and women's tournaments would be seeded via a set of advanced metrics that it calls the WAC Résumé Seeding System, developed by statistics guru Ken Pomeroy alongside WAC officials. Tournament entry will still be based on conference record.[6]
  • August 3
  • August 12 – The Indiana University and Purdue University systems announced that Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis will be dissolved in 2024 and replaced by separate IU- and Purdue-affiliated institutions.[9] The current athletic program, the IUPUI Jaguars, will transfer to the new IU Indianapolis.[10]
  • August 31 – The Division I Board of Directors adopted a series of changes to transfer rules.[11]
    • Transfer windows were adopted for all Division I sports. Student-athletes who wish to be immediately eligible at their next school must enter the NCAA transfer portal within the designated period(s) for their sport. For women's basketball, the window opens on the day after Selection Sunday and runs for 60 days.
    • Student-athletes who experience head coaching changes, or those whose athletic aid is reduced, canceled, or not renewed, may transfer outside designated windows without penalty.
    • Transferring student-athletes will be guaranteed their financial aid at their next school through graduation.
  • September 21 – Houston Baptist University announced it had changed its name to Houston Christian University, effective immediately. The athletic nickname of Huskies was not affected.[12]
  • October 14 – Conference USA announced that ASUN Conference member Kennesaw State would join C-USA in 2024.[13]
  • October 18 – The Associated Press released its preseason poll. Defending national champion South Carolina was the unanimous #1, marking the Gamecocks' third straight season at the top spot. Other poll highlights:[14]
    • For the first time since 2006, UConn was ranked outside the top 5 in the preseason poll, landing at No. 6.
    • Two programs equaled their highest-ever rankings in any AP poll: Iowa (#4) and Virginia Tech (#13).
    • Three schools were ranked in the preseason for the first time ever: Creighton (#21), South Dakota State (#23), and Princeton (#24).
  • October 25 – The AP released its preseason All-America team. South Carolina's Aliyah Boston and Iowa's Caitlin Clark were unanimous choices, joined on the team by Haley Jones of Stanford, Ashley Joens of Iowa State, Elizabeth Kitley of Virginia Tech, and Aneesah Morrow of DePaul.[15]
  • November 2 reported that Gonzaga athletic director Chris Standiford and Big 12 Conference commissioner Brett Yormark had met the previous week in the Dallas area regarding a possible Gonzaga move to that conference as a full but non-football member. The report also indicated that Gonzaga had at least some level of talks with the Big East Conference and Pac-12 Conference in the preceding months.[16]
  • November 17 – During a meeting in San Francisco, the Regents of the University of California, the governing board of the University of California system, set a date of December 14 for a special meeting to make a final determination on UCLA's planned move to the Big Ten.[17]
  • December 14 - The UC Regents approved UCLA's move to the Big Ten. Additionally, conditions were made to mitigate athletes such as investing $12 million in beneficial services including nutritional support and charter flights to reduce travel time. UCLA must also pay the University of California, Berkeley an additional $2 to $10 million due to the move affecting the latter's athletic program, with the precise total being made once the Pac-12 completes its upcoming media rights deal.[18]
  • February 8 – UConn lost 59–52 to Marquette, following an 81–77 loss to top-ranked South Carolina in its previous game. This marked the first time since March 1993 that the Huskies had lost consecutive games.[19]
  • February 9 – The Big 12 Conference announced that it had reached an agreement with Oklahoma and Texas that will allow the two schools to leave for the Southeastern Conference in 2024 instead of the originally announced 2025 schedule.[20] Approval by the two schools' governing boards was seen as a formality.[21]
  • February 24 – In the first sanctions issued by the NCAA regarding name, image, and likeness opportunities, Miami (FL) was placed on one year of probation and received other minor penalties for its involvement in arranging a meeting between alumnus and booster John Ruiz and twin players and social media stars Haley and Hanna Cavinder, who transferred together from Fresno State before the 2022–23 season. Neither Ruiz nor the Cavinder twins received any direct sanctions.[22]
  • March 20 – St. Francis Brooklyn announced that it would terminate its athletic program after the spring 2023 semester.[23]
  • May 10 - Le Moyne announced it would reclassify to Division I from Division II and join the Northeast Conference effective July 1, 2023.
  • May 12 - Western Illinois announced it would leave the Summit League for the Ohio Valley Conference effective July 1, 2023.

Milestones and records

  • December 21 – Caitlin Clark of Iowa reached 2,000 career points in the 75th game of her college career, a 92–54 win over Dartmouth. This equaled Delaware's Elena Delle Donne for the fastest to 2,000 points by a D-I women's player in the current century.[24]
  • January 25 – Taylor Robertson of Oklahoma tied Kelsey Mitchell, who played at Ohio State from 2014 to 2018, for the most career three-pointers in D-I women's basketball, at 497. While Robertson was playing in her fifth season due to benefiting from the NCAA's COVID-19 eligibility waiver for the 2020–21 season, she reached the mark in two fewer games than Mitchell (137 to 139).[25]
  • January 28 – Robertson took sole possession of the record for career three-pointers in Oklahoma's 86–78 loss to Iowa State.[26]
  • March 11 – Iowa State's Ashley Joens became the 14th Division I women's player with 3,000 career points, reaching the mark in the Cyclones' 82–72 win over Oklahoma in the Big 12 tournament semifinals.[27]
  • March 18 – Villanova's Maddy Siegrist became the fifth Division I women's player with 1,000 points in a season, reaching the mark in the Wildcats' 76–59 win over Cleveland State in the first round of the NCAA tournament.[28]
  • March 31 – Clark reached the following milestones with her 41-point performance in Iowa's 77–73 upset of South Carolina in the NCAA tournament semifinals:[29]
    • The sixth D-I women's player, and second this season, to record 1,000 points in a season.
    • The first D-I women's player to score 1,000 points and record 300 assists in the same season (having previously reached the assists mark).
    • The Big Ten Conference record for most points in a season.
    • Following her 41-point triple-double against Louisville in the Seattle 4 regional final, Clark also became the first player ever with consecutive 40-point games in either the D-I women's or men's toutnament.[30]

Conference membership changes

Twenty-six schools joined new conferences or became independents, including five schools from Division II that started transitions to Division I this season and one in the transition process from Division I to Division III.

As noted previously, Incarnate Word backed out of a planned move from the Southland Conference to the Western Athletic Conference, and Lamar, which had planned to make the opposite move in 2023, pushed this move forward to 2022.

School Former conference New conference
Austin Peay Ohio Valley Conference ASUN Conference
Belmont Ohio Valley Conference Missouri Valley Conference
Bryant Northeast Conference America East Conference
Chicago State Western Athletic Conference Independent
Hampton Big South Conference Colonial Athletic Association
Hartford America East Conference Independent
James Madison Colonial Athletic Association Sun Belt Conference
Lamar Western Athletic Conference Southland Conference
Lindenwood Great Lakes Valley Conference (D-II) Ohio Valley Conference
Little Rock Sun Belt Conference Ohio Valley Conference
Loyola Chicago Missouri Valley Conference Atlantic 10 Conference
Marshall Conference USA Sun Belt Conference
Monmouth Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Colonial Athletic Association
Mount St. Mary's Northeast Conference Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference
Murray State Ohio Valley Conference Missouri Valley Conference
North Carolina A&T Big South Conference Colonial Athletic Association
Old Dominion Conference USA Sun Belt Conference
Queens South Atlantic Conference (D-II) ASUN Conference
Southern Indiana Great Lakes Valley Conference (D-II) Ohio Valley Conference
Southern Miss Conference USA Sun Belt Conference
Southern Utah Big Sky Conference Western Athletic Conference
Stonehill Northeast-10 Conference (D-II) Northeast Conference
Stony Brook America East Conference Colonial Athletic Association
Texas A&M–Commerce Lone Star Conference (D-II) Southland Conference
UIC Horizon League Missouri Valley Conference
UT Arlington Sun Belt Conference Western Athletic Conference

The 2022−23 season was the last for at least 16 Division I schools in their then-current conferences, and for one Division II school before reclassification to Division I. It was also Hartford's only season as a D-I independent and the last season of athletics for St. Francis Brooklyn.

School Former conference New conference
BYUWCCBig 12
CampbellBig SouthCAA
CharlotteC-USAAmerican
CincinnatiAmericanBig 12
Florida AtlanticC-USAAmerican
HartfordIndependentCCC (D-III)
HoustonAmericanBig 12
Jacksonville StateASUNC-USA
Le MoyneNE-10 (D-II)NEC
LibertyASUNC-USA
New Mexico StateWACC-USA
North TexasC-USAAmerican
RiceC-USAAmerican
St. Francis BrooklynNECNone (dropped athletics)
Sam HoustonWACC-USA
UABC-USAAmerican
UCFAmericanBig 12
UTSAC-USAAmerican
Western IllinoisSummitOVC

Arenas

New arenas

Arenas of new D-I teams

All five new D-I members in 2022–23 play on their respective campuses.

Arenas closing

The following D-I programs plan to open new arenas for the 2023−24 season, or move home games to a pre-existing venue. All will move within their current campuses otherwise indicated.

  • Austin Peay will leave the on-campus Winfield Dunn Center for the new F&M Bank Arena in downtown Clarksville, Tennessee after 49 seasons. The new arena was originally planned to open for the 2022–23 season, but was delayed to 2023–24.[37]
  • Baylor will leave the Ferrell Center for the new Foster Pavilion; the venue is scheduled to open in the fall of 2023 or early 2024.[38]
  • Georgia Southern will leave the Hanner Fieldhouse for the new Jack and Ruth Ann Hill Convocation Center; the venue was scheduled to open in the early fall of 2023, but was delayed until 2024–25 season.[39]
  • Longwood will leave Willett Hall for the new Joan Perry Brock Center; the venue is scheduled to open in Summer 2023.[40]
  • St. Francis Brooklyn began closing its Remsen Street campus, including Generoso Pope Athletic Complex, at the end of the 2021–22 school year as part of the college's move to a new campus on Livingston Street in Downtown Brooklyn. Home games will at least temporarily be played about 2 miles (3 km) away at Pratt Institute, as the Livingston Street campus has no basketball venue.[41] The final women's basketball game at Pope Athletic Complex was a 64–59 loss to UMBC on November 20.[42]
  • Vermont was originally slated to open the new Tarrant Event Center, the replacement for Patrick Gym, in 2021. However, the new arena has since been placed on indefinite hold. Construction was initially halted by COVID-19. With the Tarrant Center being part of a much larger upgrade of UVM's athletic and recreation facilities, UVM chose to prioritize a new student recreation center. Construction of the Tarrant Center is now being hampered by increased borrowing costs.[43]

Seasonal outlook

The Top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaching Polls

Pre-season polls

AP
Ranking Team
1 South Carolina (30)
2 Stanford
3 Texas
4 Iowa
5 Tennessee
6 UConn
7 Louisville
8 Iowa State
9 Notre Dame
10 NC State
11 Indiana
12 North Carolina
13 Virginia Tech
14 Ohio State
15 Oklahoma
16 LSU
17 Maryland
18 Baylor
19 Arizona
20 Oregon
21 Creighton
22 Nebraska
23 South Dakota State
24 Princeton
25 Michigan
USA Today Coaches
Ranking Team
1 South Carolina (30)
2 Stanford (1)
3 Texas
4 Tennessee
5 Louisville
6 UConn т
Iowa т
8 NC State
9 Iowa State
10 Notre Dame
11 Indiana
12 North Carolina
13 Virginia Tech
14 LSU
15 Ohio State
16 Oklahoma
17 Baylor
18 Maryland
19 Arizona
20 Oregon
21 Creighton
22 Nebraska
23 Michigan
24 South Dakota State
25 Princeton

Final polls

AP
Ranking Team
1 South Carolina (28)
2 Indiana
3 Iowa
4 Virginia Tech
5 Stanford
6 UConn
7 Maryland
8 Utah
9 LSU
10 Villanova т
Notre Dame т
12 Ohio State
13 Duke
14 UCLA
15 Texas
16 Oklahoma
17 Iowa State
18 Michigan
19 Gonzaga
20 North Carolina
21 Colorado
22 UNLV
23 Washington State
24 Tennessee
25 Arizona
USA Today Coaches
Ranking Team
1 LSU (30)
2 Iowa
3 South Carolina
4 Virginia Tech
5 Maryland
6 Ohio State
7 Indiana
8 Utah
9 UConn
10 Stanford
11 Notre Dame
12 Villanova
13 UCLA
14 Louisville
15 Colorado
16 Duke
17 Oklahoma
18 Miami (FL)
19 Texas
20 Tennessee
21 North Carolina
22 Ole Miss
23 Michigan
24 Florida Gulf Coast
25 Iowa State

Top 10 matchups

Rankings reflect the AP poll Top 25.

Regular season

Regular season

Early season tournaments

Tournament/event name Dates Location No. Teams Champions Notes
Preseason WNIT November 12–20 Multiple locations 4 Texas Tech
Dublin Basketball Challenge November 18–19 National Basketball Arena (Dublin, Ireland) 4 Marist
Battle 4 Atlantis November 19–21 Imperial Arena (Nassau, Bahamas) 8 UCLA
Baha Mar Hoops Pink Flamingo November 21–23 Baha Mar Convention Center (Nassau, Bahamas) 8 Virginia Tech
Utah
San Juan Shootout November 22–26 Coliseo Roberto Clemente (San Juan, PR) 10 Nebraska
South Point Thanksgiving Shootout November 22–26 South Point Arena (Enterprise, NV) 10 Indiana
Cancún Challenge November 24–26 Moon Palace Golf & Spa Resort (Cancún, MX) 10 Oklahoma State/Florida State/Purdue (Mayan)
NC State/Northern Iowa (Riviera)
St Pete Showcase November 24–26 McArthur Center (St. Petersburg, FL) 4 Portland
Daytona Beach Invitational November 25–26 Ocean Center (Daytona Beach, FL) 8 Penn State
Goombay Splash November 23–27 Gateway Christian Academy (Bimini, Bahamas) 6 LSU (Goombay)
Notre Dame (Bimini)
Paradise Jam tournament November 24–27 Sports and Fitness Center (Saint Thomas, VI) 8 Georgia
Arkansas
Phil Knight Invitational November 24−27 Chiles Center, Moda Center, and Veterans Memorial Coliseum
(Portland, OR)
8 North Carolina
Phil Knight Legacy November 24−27 8 UConn
Gulf Coast Showcase November 25–27 Hertz Arena (Estero, FL) 8 Michigan
West Palm Beach Invitational December 18–21 Student Life Center (West Palm Beach, FL) 10 West Virginia
Holiday Hoops Classic December 19–21 South Point Arena (Enterprise, NV) 6 Cleveland State

Upsets

An upset is a victory by an underdog team. In the context of NCAA Division I women's basketball, this generally constitutes an unranked team defeating a team currently ranked in the top 25. This list will highlight those upsets of ranked teams by unranked teams as well as upsets of No. 1 teams. Rankings are from the AP poll. Bold type indicates winning teams in "true road games"—i.e., those played on an opponent's home court (including secondary homes).

Winner Score Loser Date Tournament/event Notes
Villanova 69–59 No. 24 Princeton November 11, 2022
Kansas State 84–83 No. 4 Iowa November 17, 2022
Drake 80–62 No. 22 Nebraska November 19, 2022
Marquette 68–61 No. 3 Texas November 19, 2022 Battle 4 Atlantis
Gonzaga 79–67 OT No. 6 Louisville November 19, 2022 Battle 4 Atlantis
UCLA 80–63 No. 11 Tennessee November 20, 2022 Battle 4 Atlantis
South Dakota State 65–55 No. 10 Louisville November 21, 2022 Battle 4 Atlantis
Gonzaga 73–72 No. 23 Tennessee November 21, 2022 Battle 4 Atlantis
DePaul 76–67 No. 14 Maryland November 25, 2022 Fort Myers Tip-Off
Arkansas 69–53 No. 25 Kansas State November 26, 2022 Paradise Jam
South Florida 70–65 No. 22 Texas December 2, 2022
Nebraska 90–67 No. 20 Maryland December 4, 2022
Seton Hall 82–78 No. 24 Marquette December 4, 2022
St. John's 66–62 No. 13 Creighton December 4, 2022
Middle Tennessee 67–49 No. 18 Louisville December 4, 2022
Toledo 71–68 No. 14 Michigan December 8, 2022
Kansas 77–50 No. 12 Arizona December 8, 2022
South Dakota State 75–71 No. 24 Kansas State December 10, 2022 Game played in Kansas City, Missouri
South Florida 66–65OT No. 17 Arkansas December 21, 2022 San Diego Invitational
Nebraska 85–793OT No. 20 Kansas December 21, 2022
Michigan State 83–78 No. 4 Indiana December 29, 2022
Clemson 64–59 No. 7 Virginia Tech December 29, 2022
Duke 72–58 No. 6 NC State December 29, 2022
Florida State 78–71 No. 13 North Carolina December 29, 2022
Illinois 90–86 No. 12 Iowa January 1, 2023
Oregon State 77–72 No. 10 UCLA January 1, 2023
Providence 79–75 No. 25 Creighton January 4, 2023
Seton Hall 72–51 No. 24 St. John's January 4, 2023
Miami 62–58 No. 22 North Carolina January 5, 2023
Boston College 79–71 No. 10 NC State January 5, 2023
Colorado 77–67 No. 8 Utah January 6, 2023
Miami 77–66 No. 9 Virginia Tech January 8, 2023
Texas 72–59 No. 23 Kansas January 10, 2023
Oklahoma State 70–65 No. 18 Baylor January 11, 2023
Florida State 91–72 No. 11 NC State January 12, 2023
Colorado 72–65 No. 14 Arizona January 13, 2023
West Virginia 74–65 No. 18 Baylor January 15, 2023
Washington State 85–84OT No. 21 Oregon January 15, 2023
USC 55–46 No. 2 Stanford January 15, 2023
Texas 68–53 No. 15 Iowa State January 15, 2023
Texas Tech 68–64 No. 25 Texas January 18, 2023
Oregon State 68–65 No. 23 Oregon January 20, 2023 Rivalry
Texas 78–58 No. 14 Oklahoma January 25, 2023
Purdue 62–52 No. 22 Illinois January 26, 2023
Purdue 73–65 No. 2 Ohio State January 29, 2023
Washington State 70–59 No. 19 Arizona January 29, 2023
USC 71–54 No. 25 Colorado January 29, 2023
Kansas State 78–77 No. 12 Iowa State February 1, 2023
Georgia Tech 68–62 No. 15 NC State February 2, 2023
Santa Clara 77–72 No. 17 Gonzaga February 2, 2023
UTEP 65–62 No. 21 Middle Tennessee February 2, 2023
UTSA 58–53 No. 21 Middle Tennessee February 4, 2023
Baylor 76–70 No. 12 Iowa State February 4, 2023
Louisville 62–55 No. 11 North Carolina February 5, 2023 Play4Kay
Washington 72–67 No. 2 Stanford February 5, 2023
Marquette 59–52 No. 4 UConn February 8, 2023
Miami 86–82 No. 19 Florida State February 9, 2023
Syracuse 75–67 No. 14 North Carolina February 9, 2023
West Virginia 73–60 No. 21 Iowa State February 11, 2023
Virginia 71–59 No. 22 NC State February 12, 2023
Houston 71–69 No. 24 South Florida February 12, 2023
NC State 77–66OT No. 19 North Carolina February 16, 2023
California 81–78OT No. 25 USC February 19, 2023
St. John's 69–64 No. 4 Connecticut February 21, 2023
Oklahoma State 73–68 No. 20 Iowa State February 22, 2023
Nebraska 90–57 No. 25 Illinois February 22, 2023
Washington State 62–55 No. 17 UCLA February 23, 2023
Oregon 73–59 No. 14 Arizona February 23, 2023
Oregon State 78–70 No. 14 Arizona February 25, 2023
Wisconsin 78–70 No. 12 Michigan February 26, 2023
Clemson 74–61 No. 23 Florida State February 26, 2023
Baylor 63–54 No. 12 Texas February 27, 2023
Kansas 98–93 No. 23 Iowa State March 1, 2023
Washington State 66–58 No. 3 Utah March 2, 2023 Pac-12 Tournament
Washington State 61–49 No. 20 Colorado March 3, 2023 Pac-12 Tournament
Louisville 64–38 No. 10 Notre Dame March 4, 2023 ACC Tournament
Tennessee 69–67 No. 4 LSU March 4, 2023 SEC Tournament
Washington State 65–61 No. 19 UCLA March 5, 2023 Pac-12 Tournament
Portland 64–60 No. 16 Gonzaga March 7, 2023 WCC Tournament
Iowa State 82–72 No. 14 Oklahoma March 11, 2023 Big 12 tournament
Iowa State 61–51 No. 15 Texas March 12, 2023 Big 12 tournament

In addition to the upsets in which an unranked team defeated a ranked team, this list includes non–Division I teams to defeat Division I teams. Bold type indicates winning teams in "true road games"—i.e., those played on an opponent's home court (including secondary homes).

Winner Score Loser Date Tournament/event Notes
Lenoir–Rhyne (Division II) 57–46[44] UNC Wilmington November 7, 2022
Alaska-Anchorage (Division II) 64–51[45] UC Riverside November 18, 2022 Great Alaska Shootout
Alaska Anchorage (Division II) 88–75[46] La Salle November 19, 2022 Great Alaska Shootout
St. Mary's (TX) (Division II) 66–65[47] Sam Houston November 27, 2022
St. Francis (IL) (NAIA) 72–62[48] Chicago State January 24, 2023

Conference winners and tournaments

Each of the 32 Division I athletic conferences will end its regular season with a single-elimination tournament. The team with the best regular-season record in each conference receives the number one seed in each tournament, with tiebreakers used as needed in the case of ties for the top seeding. Unless otherwise noted, the winners of these tournaments will receive automatic invitations to the 2023 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament.

Conference Regular
season first place
Conference
Player of the year
Conference
Coach of the year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (city)
Tournament
winner
America East Conference Albany
Vermont[lower-alpha 1]
Adrianna Smith, Maine[49] Alisa Kresge, Vermont[49] 2023 America East women's basketball tournament Campus sites Vermont
American Athletic Conference South Florida Dulcy Fankam Mendjiadeu & Elena Tsineke, South Florida[50] Kim McNeill, East Carolina[50] 2023 American Athletic Conference women's basketball tournament Dickies Arena
(Fort Worth, TX)
East Carolina
ASUN Conference Florida Gulf Coast Tishara Morehouse, Florida Gulf Coast[51] Karl Smesko, Florida Gulf Coast[51] 2023 ASUN women's basketball tournament Campus sites Florida Gulf Coast
Atlantic 10 Conference Rhode Island
UMass[lower-alpha 1]
Sam Breen, UMass[52] Tammi Reiss, Rhode Island[52] 2023 Atlantic 10 women's basketball tournament Chase Fieldhouse
(Wilmington, DE)
Saint Louis
Atlantic Coast Conference Notre Dame Elizabeth Kitley, Virginia Tech[53] Niele Ivey, Notre Dame[53] 2023 ACC women's basketball tournament Greensboro Coliseum
(Greensboro, NC)
Virginia Tech
Big 12 Conference Oklahoma
Texas[lower-alpha 1]
Ashley Joens, Iowa State[54] Vic Schaefer, Texas[54] 2023 Big 12 Conference women's basketball tournament Municipal Auditorium
(Kansas City, MO)
Iowa State
Big East Conference UConn Maddy Siegrist, Villanova[55] Joe Tartamella, St. John's[55] 2023 Big East women's basketball tournament Mohegan Sun Arena
(Uncasville, CT)
UConn
Big Sky Conference Montana State
Northern Arizona[lower-alpha 1]
Sacramento State
Kahlaijah Dean, Sacramento State[56] Tricia Binford, Montana State; Mark Campbell, Sacramento State; & Loree Payne, Northern Arizona[56] 2023 Big Sky Conference women's basketball tournament Idaho Central Arena
(Boise, ID)
Sacramento State
Big South Conference Gardner–Webb Jhessyka Williams, Gardner–Webb[57] Alex Simmons, Gardner–Webb[57] 2023 Big South Conference women's basketball tournament Bojangles Coliseum
(Charlotte, NC)
Gardner–Webb
Big Ten Conference Indiana Caitlin Clark, Iowa[58] Teri Moren, Indiana[58] 2023 Big Ten women's basketball tournament Target Center
(Minneapolis, MN)
Iowa
Big West Conference UC Irvine Tori Harris, Long Beach State[59] Jeff Cammon, Long Beach State[59] 2023 Big West Conference women's basketball tournament Dollar Loan Center
(Henderson, NV)
Hawai'i
Colonial Athletic Association Drexel
Northeastern
Towson[lower-alpha 1]
Keishana Washington, Drexel[60] Bridgette Mitchell, Northeastern[60] 2023 CAA women's basketball tournament SECU Arena
(Towson, MD)
Monmouth
Conference USA Middle Tennessee Jordyn Jenkins, UTEP[61] Kevin Baker, UTEP & Rick Insell, Middle Tennessee[61] 2023 Conference USA women's basketball tournament Ford Center at The Star
(Frisco, TX)
Middle Tennessee
Horizon League Green Bay Destiny Leo, Cleveland State[62] Kevin Borseth, Green Bay[62] 2023 Horizon League women's basketball tournament Quarterfinals: Campus sites
Semifinals and final: Indiana Farmers Coliseum
(Indianapolis, IN)
Cleveland State
Ivy League Columbia
Princeton[lower-alpha 1]
Kaitlyn Chen, Princeton[63] Megan Griffith, Columbia[63] 2023 Ivy League women's basketball tournament Jadwin Gymnasium
(Princeton, NJ)
Princeton
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Iona Juana Camilion, Iona[64] Billi Chambers, Iona[65] 2023 MAAC women's basketball tournament Boardwalk Hall
(Atlantic City, NJ)
Iona
Mid-American Conference Toledo Quinesha Lockett, Toledo[66] Tricia Cullop, Toledo[66] 2023 Mid-American Conference women's basketball tournament Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
(Cleveland, OH)
Toledo
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Norfolk State Destiny Howell, Howard[67] Larry Vickers, Norfolk State[67] 2023 MEAC women's basketball tournament Norfolk Scope
(Norfolk, VA)
Norfolk State
Missouri Valley Conference Belmont
Illinois State[lower-alpha 1]
Paige Robinson, Illinois State[68] Kristen Gillespie, Illinois State[68] 2023 Missouri Valley Conference women's basketball tournament Vibrant Arena at The MARK
(Moline, IL)
Drake
Mountain West Conference UNLV McKenna Hofschild, Colorado State[69] Lindy La Rocque, UNLV[69] 2023 Mountain West Conference women's basketball tournament Thomas and Mack Center
(Paradise, NV)
UNLV
Northeast Conference Fairleigh Dickinson Ny’Ceara Pryor, Sacred Heart[70] Angelika Szumilo, Fairleigh Dickinson[70] 2023 Northeast Conference women's basketball tournament Campus sites Sacred Heart
Ohio Valley Conference Little Rock Sali Kourouma, Little Rock[71] Joe Foley, Little Rock[71] 2023 Ohio Valley Conference women's basketball tournament Ford Center
(Evansville, IN)
Tennessee Tech
Pac-12 Conference Stanford[lower-alpha 1]
Utah
Alissa Pili, Utah[72][73] Lynne Roberts, Utah[72][73] 2023 Pac-12 Conference women's basketball tournament Michelob Ultra Arena
(Paradise, NV)
Washington State
Patriot League Boston University Frannie Hottinger, Lehigh[74] Melissa Graves, Boston University[74] 2023 Patriot League women's basketball tournament Campus sites Holy Cross
Southeastern Conference South Carolina Aliyah Boston, South Carolina[75] Dawn Staley, South Carolina[75] 2023 SEC women's basketball tournament Bon Secours Wellness Arena
(Greenville, SC)
South Carolina
Southern Conference Wofford Rachael Rose, Wofford (coaches)
Andrea Bailey, Samford (media)[76]
Brenda Mock Brown, East Tennessee State (coaches)
Jimmy Garrity, Wofford (media)[76]
2023 Southern Conference women's basketball tournament Harrah's Cherokee Center
(Asheville, NC)
Chattanooga
Southland Conference Southeastern Louisiana[lower-alpha 1]
Texas A&M–Corpus Christi
Alecia Westbrook, Texas A&M–Corpus Christi[77] Ayla Guzzardo, Southeastern Louisiana[77] 2023 Southland Conference women's basketball tournament The Legacy Center
(Lake Charles, LA)
Southeastern Louisiana
Southwestern Athletic Conference Jackson State Ayana Emmanuel, Alabama State[78] Tomekia Reed, Jackson State[78] 2023 SWAC women's basketball tournament Bartow Arena
(Birmingham, AL)
Southern
Summit League South Dakota State Myah Selland, South Dakota State[79] Aaron Johnston, South Dakota State[79] 2023 Summit League women's basketball tournament Denny Sanford Premier Center
(Sioux Falls, SD)
South Dakota State
Sun Belt Conference James Madison[lower-alpha 1]
Southern Miss
Texas State
Kiki Jefferson, James Madison[80] Zenarae Antoine, Texas State[80] 2023 Sun Belt Conference women's basketball tournament Pensacola Bay Center
(Pensacola, FL)
James Madison
West Coast Conference Gonzaga Kaylynne Truong, Gonzaga[81] Lisa Fortier, Gonzaga[81] 2023 West Coast Conference women's basketball tournament Orleans Arena
(Paradise, NV)[lower-alpha 2]
Portland
Western Athletic Conference Southern Utah Starr Jacobs, UT Arlington[82] Tracy Sanders, Southern Utah[82] 2023 WAC women's basketball tournament Southern Utah
  1. Top seed in conference tournament.
  2. The first round of the WAC tournament was held at Michelob Ultra Arena, also in the community of Paradise.

Statistical leaders

Includes postseason games.

Points per gameRebounds per gameAssists per gameSteals per game
PlayerSchoolPPGPlayerSchoolRPGPlayerSchoolAPGPlayerSchoolSPG
Maddy SiegristVillanova29.2Lauren GustinBYU16.7Caitlin ClarkIowa8.6Ny'Ceara PryorSacred Heart3.70
Caitlin ClarkIowa27.8Angel ReeseLSU15.4Nika MühlUConn7.9Aaliyah ParkerNiagara3.66
Keishana WashingtonDrexel27.7Taiyanna JacksonKansas12.7Maura HendersonDrexel7.8Asiah DingleFordham3.91
Aneesah MorrowDePaul25.7A'Jah DavisNorthern Illinois12.4Rori HarmonTexas7.4Alasia SmithGardner–Webb3.41
Angel ReeseLSU23.0Dulcy Fankam MendjiadeuSouth Florida12.3McKenna HofschildColorado State7.2Camille DownsNorfolk State3.41
Blocked shots per gameField goal percentageThree-point field goal percentageFree throw percentage
PlayerSchoolBPGPlayerSchoolFG%PlayerSchool3FG%PlayerSchoolFT%
Brooke FlowersSaint Louis3.80Mya BerkmanLiberty69.50Alex GiannarosBoston University51.55Erin HouptMercer93.88
Rayah MarshallUSC3.50Mackenzie HolmesIndiana68.04Brynna MaxwellGonzaga48.07Maddie ScherrKentucky91.95
Cameron BrinkStanford3.47Monika CzinanoIowa67.41Kate MagerIona47.71Abbey EllisPurdue91.67
Emma MerriweatherULM3.21Taiyanna JacksonKansas66.09Yarden GarzonIndiana45.75Margaret WhitleyUAB91.51
Promise TaylorSouthern Illinois3.06Isnelle NatabouSacramento State64.24Mercedes StaplesSan Diego State45.52Sydney WagnerWilliam & Mary91.26

Postseason

Tournament upsets

Per the NCAA, "Upsets are defined as when the winner of the game was seeded two or more places lower than the team it defeated."[83] The 2023 tournament has nine upsets so far, with five in the first round, three in the second round, and one in the Sweet Sixteen. Stanford's loss to Ole Miss marked the first time a No. 1 seed failed to make the Sweet Sixteen since 2009.[84] With Indiana's loss to Miami, this marked the first time two No. 1 seeds failed to make the Sweet Sixteen since 1998.[85]

RoundGreenville 1Seattle 4Greenville 2Seattle 3
First round No. 11 Mississippi State defeated No. 6 Creighton, 79–64. No. 10 Georgia defeated No. 7 Florida State, 66–54.
No. 12 Toledo defeated No. 5 Iowa State, 80–73.
Second Round None
No. 9 Miami (FL) defeated No. 1 Indiana, 70–68. None
Sweet 16 None None No. 9 Miami (FL) defeated No. 4 Villanova, 70–65. None
Elite 8 None None
Final 4

Final Four – American Airlines Center, Dallas, Texas

National semifinals
Final Four
Friday, March 31
National Championship
Sunday, April 2
      
GR1(1) South Carolina 73
SR4(2) Iowa 77
SR4(2) Iowa 85
GR2(3) LSU 102
GR2(3) LSU 79
SR3(1) Virginia Tech 72

National Invitation tournament

Semifinals
March 28–29
Championship
April 1
CBSSN
      
Washington 36
(H) Kansas 61
(H) Kansas 66
Columbia 59
Columbia 77
(H) Bowling Green 70

Women's Basketball Invitational

This season saw the debut of a third national postseason tournament in the Women's Basketball Invitational, a 16-team affair with all games played on home courts.

Semifinals
March 18
Championship
March 19
      
East Tennessee State 53
New Mexico State 57
New Mexico State 61
Cal Baptist 63
Georgia Southern 80
Cal Baptist 82

Conference standings

2022–23 America East Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Vermont142 .875257  .781
Albany142 .8752212  .647
Maine115 .6881614  .533
UMBC106 .6251415  .483
NJIT88 .5001316  .448
Binghamton610 .3751317  .433
UMass Lowell412 .250522  .185
Bryant313 .188921  .300
New Hampshire214 .125721  .250
2023 AmEast Tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
2022–23 American Athletic Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
South Florida151 .938277  .794
Memphis114 .7332211  .667
East Carolina115 .688239  .719
Houston105 .6671516  .484
SMU78 .4671712  .586
Tulane79 .4381814  .563
Tulsa79 .4381713  .567
Wichita State610 .3751815  .545
Temple610 .3751118  .379
UCF411 .2671415  .483
Cincinnati214 .125921  .300
2023 AAC tournament winner
As of March 24, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
Source: The American
2022–23 Atlantic 10 women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Rhode Island142 .875267  .788
UMass142 .875277  .794
Fordham106 .6251913  .594
Saint Louis106 .6251718  .486
Richmond86 .5712111  .656
Saint Joseph's97 .5632011  .645
George Washington97 .5631813  .581
La Salle87 .5331714  .548
Duquesne88 .5001912  .613
George Mason88 .5001615  .516
Davidson68 .4291416  .467
Dayton510 .333721  .250
VCU412 .250722  .241
St. Bonaventure313 .188626  .188
Loyola Chicago115 .063624  .200
2023 A10 Tournament winner
As of March 24, 2023
2022–23 ACC women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 10т Notre Dame153 .833276  .818
No. 13 Duke144 .778267  .788
No. 4 Virginia Tech144 .778314  .886
Louisville126 .6672612  .684
Florida State126 .6672310  .697
Miami (FL)117 .6112213  .629
No. 20 North Carolina117 .6112211  .667
NC State99 .5002012  .625
Syracuse99 .5002013  .606
Clemson711 .3891916  .543
Boston College513 .2781617  .485
Wake Forest513 .2781717  .500
Virginia414 .2221515  .500
Georgia Tech414 .2221317  .433
Pittsburgh315 .1671020  .333
2023 ACC tournament winner
As of March 27, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 ASUN women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Florida Gulf Coast171 .944334  .892
Liberty162 .889249  .727
Lipscomb135 .7222012  .625
Austin Peay126 .6671712  .586
Eastern Kentucky117 .6111814  .563
Kennesaw State108 .5561516  .484
North Alabama108 .5561515  .500
Jacksonville State99 .5001614  .533
Stetson612 .3331320  .394
Jacksonville612 .3331217  .414
North Florida513 .278820  .286
Bellarmine*513 .278922  .290
Central Arkansas315 .167821  .276
Queens*315 .167821  .276
2023 ASUN Tournament winner
As of March 20, 2023
2022–23 Big 12 Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 15 Texas144 .7782610  .722
No. 16 Oklahoma144 .778267  .788
No. 17 Iowa State117 .6112210  .688
Oklahoma State108 .5562112  .636
West Virginia108 .5561912  .613
Baylor108 .5562013  .606
Kansas99 .5002211  .667
Texas Tech612 .3332015  .571
Kansas State513 .2781916  .543
TCU117 .056823  .258
2023 Big 12 Tournament winner
As of March 24, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 Big East women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 6 UConn182 .900316  .838
No. 10т Villanova173 .850307  .811
Creighton155 .750229  .710
St. John's137 .650239  .719
Marquette137 .6502111  .656
Seton Hall1010 .5001914  .576
DePaul812 .4001617  .485
Georgetown614 .3001417  .452
Butler614 .3001119  .367
Providence416 .2001319  .406
Xavier020 .000723  .233
2023 Big East tournament winner
As of March 24, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 Big Sky women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Sacramento State135 .722257  .781
Montana State135 .7222011  .645
Northern Arizona135 .7222114  .600
Eastern Washington117 .6111911  .633
Montana108 .5561416  .467
Idaho99 .5001317  .433
Portland State810 .4441516  .484
Idaho State612 .3331119  .367
Northern Colorado513 .2781318  .419
Weber State216 .111625  .194
2023 Big Sky tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
2022–23 Big South women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Gardner–Webb180 1.000295  .853
High Point135 .7221715  .531
Campbell108 .5561615  .516
Presbyterian99 .5001317  .433
Radford99 .5001417  .452
Longwood810 .444921  .300
UNC Asheville711 .3891219  .387
USC Upstate711 .3891120  .355
Winthrop612 .333822  .267
Charleston Southern315 .167525  .167
2023 Big South tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
2022–23 Big Ten women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 2 Indiana162 .889284  .875
No. 3 Iowa153 .833317  .816
No. 7 Maryland153 .833287  .800
No. 12 Ohio State126 .667288  .778
No. 18 Michigan117 .6112310  .697
Illinois117 .6112210  .688
Purdue98 .5291911  .633
Nebraska810 .4441815  .545
Michigan State710 .4121614  .533
Wisconsin612 .3331120  .355
Rutgers513 .2781220  .375
Minnesota414 .2221119  .367
Penn State414 .2221417  .452
Northwestern216 .111921  .300
2023 Big Ten Tournament winner
As of April 2, 2023
Rankings from AP Poll
2022–23 Big West women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
UC Irvine162 .889257  .781
Long Beach State173 .8502310  .697
Hawai'i137 .6501815  .545
UC Davis127 .6321614  .533
UC Santa Barbara128 .6002112  .636
UC San Diego*1010 .5001317  .433
Cal State Fullerton911 .4501416  .467
Cal Poly712 .3681018  .357
Cal State Northridge614 .300724  .226
Cal State Bakersfield317 .150823  .258
UC Riverside317 .150626  .188
* ineligible for the 2023 NCAA tournament due to transition period
2023 Big West tournament winner
As of March 20, 2023
2022–23 CAA women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Towson135 .7222111  .656
Drexel135 .7222110  .677
Northeastern135 .7221912  .613
William & Mary126 .6671813  .581
North Carolina A&T126 .6671812  .600
Stony Brook117 .6111813  .581
Monmouth99 .5001816  .529
Delaware99 .5001614  .533
Hampton810 .4441218  .400
Charleston612 .3331118  .379
Elon513 .278921  .300
Hofstra414 .2221220  .375
UNC Wilmington216 .111525  .167
2023 CAA tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 Conference USA women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Middle Tennessee182 .900285  .848
Western Kentucky146 .7001914  .576
Rice137 .650239  .719
UTEP128 .6002012  .625
Louisiana Tech128 .6001913  .594
UTSA911 .4501319  .406
North Texas812 .4001120  .355
FIU713 .3501419  .424
Charlotte713 .3501219  .387
UAB515 .2501417  .452
Florida Atlantic515 .2501218  .400
2023 C-USA Tournament winner
As of March 19, 2023
2022–23 Horizon League women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Green Bay182 .900285  .848
Cleveland State173 .850304  .882
IUPUI137 .6501713  .567
Youngstown State137 .6501911  .633
Northern Kentucky1010 .5001714  .548
Purdue Fort Wayne911 .4501419  .424
Oakland812 .4001317  .433
Milwaukee812 .4001119  .367
Wright State614 .300824  .250
Robert Morris515 .2501119  .367
Detroit Mercy317 .150525  .167
2023 Horizon League Tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
2022–23 Ivy League women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Columbia122 .857265  .839
Princeton122 .857246  .800
Harvard95 .6432011  .645
Penn95 .6431712  .586
Yale77 .5001314  .481
Brown410 .2861115  .423
Cornell311 .2141017  .370
Dartmouth014 .000226  .071
2023 Ivy League Tournament winner
As of March 24, 2023
2022–23 MAAC women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Iona182 .900266  .813
Quinnipiac164 .800219  .700
Niagara164 .8001813  .581
Siena128 .6001913  .594
Fairfield119 .5501515  .500
Manhattan1010 .5001617  .485
Marist812 .4001218  .400
Mount St. Mary's713 .3501219  .387
Canisius614 .300921  .300
Rider614 .3001021  .323
Saint Peter's020 .000030  .000
2023 MAAC tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
2022–23 Mid-American Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Toledo162 .889295  .853
Bowling Green144 .778306  .833
Ball State144 .778268  .765
Kent State126 .6672111  .656
Akron810 .4441713  .567
Northern Illinois810 .4441617  .485
Eastern Michigan711 .3891515  .500
Buffalo711 .3891216  .429
Western Michigan711 .3891217  .414
Miami (OH)711 .3891219  .387
Central Michigan414 .222623  .207
Ohio414 .222623  .207
2023 MAC tournament winner
As of March 24, 2023
2022–23 MEAC women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Norfolk State113 .786267  .788
Morgan State104 .7141712  .586
Howard104 .7141614  .533
North Carolina Central86 .5711516  .484
Maryland Eastern Shore59 .3571020  .333
Delaware State59 .357719  .269
Coppin State59 .357822  .267
South Carolina State212 .143327  .100
2023 MEAC tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
2022–23 Missouri Valley Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Illinois State173 .850249  .727
Belmont173 .8502312  .657
Northern Iowa164 .8002310  .697
Missouri State146 .7002012  .625
Drake146 .700229  .710
UIC911 .4501917  .528
Southern Illinois812 .4001219  .387
Murray State713 .3501516  .484
Evansville614 .3001119  .367
Indiana State614 .3001119  .367
Valparaiso515 .250723  .233
Bradley119 .050428  .125
2023 MVC tournament winner
As of March 19, 2023
2022–23 Mountain West Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 22 UNLV180 1.000313  .912
Wyoming135 .7222311  .676
San Diego State126 .6672311  .676
Colorado State126 .6672012  .625
New Mexico126 .6672112  .636
Boise State117 .6111716  .515
Air Force810 .4441318  .419
Nevada612 .3331021  .323
Fresno State315 .1671022  .313
San Jose State315 .167625  .194
Utah State117 .056426  .133
2023 MW Tournament winner
As of March 21, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 NCAA Division I women's basketball independents standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Chicago State00 622  .214
Hartford00 226  .071
As of March 5, 2023
Rankings from AP Poll
2022–23 Northeast Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Fairleigh Dickinson142 .875248  .750
Sacred Heart124 .7501914  .576
Merrimack*106 .6251516  .484
St. Francis Brooklyn97 .5631119  .367
Wagner88 .5001315  .464
Saint Francis (PA)610 .375722  .241
Stonehill*511 .313920  .310
LIU511 .313722  .241
Central Connecticut313 .188722  .241
* ineligible for the 2023 NCAA tournament due to transition period
2023 NEC tournament winner
As of March 17, 2023
2022–23 Ohio Valley Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Little Rock171 .9442110  .677
Eastern Illinois144 .778218  .724
Tennessee Tech135 .722229  .710
Southeast Missouri State108 .5561615  .516
UT Martin99 .5001317  .433
Tennessee State711 .3891118  .379
SIU Edwardsville711 .389922  .290
Morehead State612 .3331120  .355
Southern Indiana*612 .3331217  .414
Lindenwood*117 .056224  .077
* ineligible for the 2023 NCAA tournament due to transition period
2023 OVC tournament winner
As of March 5, 2023
2022–23 Pac-12 Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 8 Utah153 .833275  .844
No. 5 Stanford153 .833296  .829
No. 21 Colorado135 .722259  .735
No. 14 UCLA117 .6112710  .730
No. 25 Arizona117 .6112210  .688
USC117 .6112110  .677
No. 23 Washington State99 .5002311  .676
Oregon711 .3892015  .571
Washington711 .3891915  .559
California414 .2221317  .433
Oregon State414 .2221318  .419
Arizona State117 .056820  .286
2023 Pac-12 Tournament winner
As of October 27, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 Patriot League women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Boston University171 .944248  .750
Holy Cross135 .722248  .750
Lehigh126 .6671714  .548
Colgate108 .5561614  .533
Army108 .5561317  .433
Bucknell99 .5001317  .433
Lafayette711 .3891019  .345
American711 .389922  .290
Loyola414 .2221021  .323
Navy117 .056129  .033
2023 Patriot League tournament winner
As of March 11, 2023
2022–23 SEC women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 1 South Carolina160 1.000361  .973
No. 9 LSU151 .938342  .944
No. 24 Tennessee133 .8132512  .676
Ole Miss115 .688259  .735
Mississippi State97 .5632211  .667
Georgia97 .5632212  .647
Alabama97 .5632011  .645
Arkansas79 .4382413  .649
Missouri610 .3751814  .563
Florida511 .3131914  .576
Auburn511 .3131615  .516
Vanderbilt313 .1881219  .387
Kentucky214 .1251219  .387
Texas A&M214 .125920  .310
2023 SEC tournament winner
As of April 2, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 SWAC women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Jackson State171 .944219  .700
Alabama State126 .6671615  .516
Alabama A&M126 .6671415  .483
Prairie View A&M126 .6671515  .500
Southern126 .6671814  .563
Arkansas–Pine Bluff108 .5561417  .452
Bethune–Cookman108 .5561118  .379
Grambling State99 .5001020  .333
Alcorn State810 .4441217  .414
Florida A&M414 .222623  .207
Texas Southern216 .111227  .069
Mississippi Valley State018 .000227  .069
2023 SWAC tournament winner
As of March 11, 2023
2022–23 Southern Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Wofford104 .7142210  .688
Chattanooga95 .6432013  .606
East Tennessee State95 .6432610  .722
Mercer86 .5711216  .429
UNC Greensboro86 .5711614  .533
Samford77 .5001317  .433
Furman311 .2141119  .367
Western Carolina212 .143921  .300
2023 SoCon Tournament winner
As of March 19, 2023
2022–23 Southland Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Southeastern Louisiana144 .7782110  .677
Texas A&M–Corpus Christi144 .7781912  .613
Lamar126 .6672012  .625
Incarnate Word108 .5561514  .517
Texas A&M–Commerce*108 .5561419  .424
McNeese810 .4441219  .387
New Orleans711 .389820  .286
Northwestern State711 .3891118  .379
Houston Christian612 .3331118  .379
Nicholls216 .111524  .172
* ineligible for the 2023 NCAA tournament due to transition period
2023 Southland tournament winner
As of March 18, 2023
2022–23 Summit League women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
South Dakota State180 1.000296  .829
North Dakota State126 .6671812  .600
North Dakota117 .6111913  .594
South Dakota108 .5561416  .467
Oral Roberts810 .4441219  .387
Omaha810 .4441517  .469
Denver810 .4441218  .400
St. Thomas*711 .3891317  .433
Western Illinois513 .2781020  .333
Kansas City315 .167923  .281
* Ineligible for the 2023 NCAA tournament due to transition from Division III
2023 Summit League Tournament winner
As of March 19, 2023
2022–23 Sun Belt Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
James Madison135 .722267  .788
Texas State135 .7222310  .697
Southern Miss135 .7222110  .677
Georgia Southern126 .6672111  .656
Old Dominion126 .6672212  .647
Troy126 .6671713  .567
Louisiana108 .5561615  .516
Marshall99 .5001714  .548
Coastal Carolina99 .5001416  .467
Arkansas State612 .3331319  .406
Appalachian State612 .3331120  .355
Georgia State513 .2781221  .364
Louisiana–Monroe315 .167723  .233
South Alabama315 .167723  .233
2023 Sun Belt Tournament winner
As of March 22, 2023
Rankings from AP poll
2022–23 WAC women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Southern Utah162 .8892310  .697
Stephen F. Austin153 .833266  .813
California Baptist135 .7222213  .629
Grand Canyon126 .6672110  .677
Utah Tech*108 .5561912  .613
New Mexico State108 .5561817  .514
Abilene Christian99 .5001515  .500
UT Arlington810 .4441417  .452
Sam Houston810 .4441317  .433
UT Rio Grande Valley612 .3331218  .400
Seattle513 .278624  .200
Utah Valley315 .167624  .200
Tarleton*216 .111821  .276
* Ineligible for the 2023 NCAA tournament due to transition from Division II
2023 WAC tournament winner
As of March 18, 2023
2022–23 West Coast Conference women's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 19 Gonzaga171 .944285  .848
Portland153 .833239  .719
San Diego117 .6111914  .576
BYU99 .5001617  .485
San Francisco 99 .5001913  .594
Pacific810 .4441517  .469
Saint Mary's612 .3331318  .419
Santa Clara 612 .3331517  .469
Pepperdine513 .2781119  .367
Loyola Marymount414 .222723  .233
2023 WCC tournament winner
As of March 24, 2023
Rankings from AP poll

Award winners

All-America teams

The NCAA has never recognized a consensus All-America team in women's basketball. This differs from the practice in men's basketball, in which the NCAA uses a combination of selections by the Associated Press (AP), the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC), the Sporting News, and the United States Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) to determine a consensus All-America team. The selection of a consensus team is possible because all four organizations select at least a first and second team, with only the USBWA not selecting a third team.

Before the 2017–18 season, it was impossible for a consensus women's All-America team to be determined because the AP had been the only body that divided its women's selections into separate teams. The USBWA first named separate teams in 2017–18. The women's counterpart to the NABC, the Women's Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA), continues the USBWA's former practice of selecting a single 10-member (plus ties) team. The NCAA does not recognize Sporting News as an All-America selector in women's basketball.

Major player of the year awards

Major freshman of the year awards

Major coach of the year awards

Other major awards

Coaching changes

Many teams will change coaches during the season and after it ends.

Team Former
coach
Interim
coach
New
coach
Reason
Akron Melissa Jackson Ryan Gensler Akron announced on February 21, 2023, that Jackson's contract would not be renewed at the end of the season, ending her 5-year tenure.[103] Illinois assistant coach Gensler was hired by the Zips on March 29.[104]
Bowling Green Robyn Fralick Fred Chmiel Fralick departed Bowling Green on March 31, 2023, after 5 seasons for the Michigan State job.[105] Fred Chmiel, who won 2 national titles on Dawn Staley's staff at South Carolina, was hired by the Falcons on April 8.[106]
Bryant Mary Burke Lynne-Ann Kokoski Burke, citing a desire to pursue other opportunities, announced she was stepping down as head coach on March 6, 2023, after 32 seasons at Bryant.[107] UMass assistant Kokoski, a former Bryant player and assistant coach under Burke, was hired by the Bulldogs on April 14.[108]
Central Arkansas Sandra Rushing Tony Kemper Rushing announced her resignation from Central Arkansas after 11 seasons on February 25, 2023, citing her ongoing care for her ailing mother, having missed eight games during the 2022–23 season due to her care obligations. Rushing left with 587 wins as a head coach, 184 of them at UCA.[109] Former Sugar Bear assistant coach and current Marshall head coach Kemper was hired on March 10.[110]
Central Connecticut Kerri Reaves Way Veney Reaves announced her resignation from Central Connecticut on March 10, 2023, after 3 seasons.[111] Temple associate head coach Veney was hired by the Blue Devils on April 28.[112]
Central Michigan Heather Oesterle Kristin Haynie CMU parted ways with Oesterle on April 6, 2023, after 4 seasons.[113] Recently hired Minnesota Lynx assistant coach and former Chippewa assistant coach Haynie was hired on April 20.[114]
Cincinnati Michelle Clark-Heard Katrina Merriweather Cincinnati announced on March 7, 2023, that they had parted ways with Clark-Heard after 5 seasons.[115] Memphis head coach and former Bearcat player and captain Merriweather was hired as her replacement on March 25.[116]
Dartmouth Adrienne Shibles Linda Cimino After 2 seasons at Dartmouth, Shibles stepped down from her head coaching position on April 17, 2023.[117] Cimino, who was head coach at St. Francis Brooklyn for the past 5 seasons before the school eliminated their entire athletic program this spring, was hired by the Big Green on May 23.[118]
Delaware State E.C. Hill Jazmone Turner Delaware State parted ways with Hill on or around June 23, 2023 after 2 seasons and named Hornets assistant Turner interim head coach for the 2023–24 season.[119]
East Tennessee State Simon Harris Brenda Mock Brown ETSU fired Harris on August 1, 2022 (effective August 15) after 1 season following alleged Title IX violations against him by former players.[120] Former UNC Asheville head coach Brenda Mock Brown was hired by the Buccaneers on August 8.[121]
Fairleigh Dickinson Angelika Szumilo Stephanie Gaitley Szumilo left FDU on April 17, 2023, after 4 seasons for the Iona job.[122] Stephanie Gaitley, head coach at 5 previous schools (most recently Fordham), was hired by the Knights on April 21.[123]
Florida A&M Shalon Pillow Bridgette Gordon Pillow announced her resignation from FAMU on July 6, 2023 (effective August 1) after 2 seasons.[124] On July 28, the Rattlers hired Bridgette Gordon, who had been hired as assistant coach by New Mexico State a month prior.[125]
Furman Jackie Carson Pierre Curtis Carson left Furman on June 8, 2023, after 13 seasons to become the ACC's senior associate commissioner for women's basketball.[126] Longtime Paladin assistant Curtis was promoted to the position the following day.[127]
Gardner–Webb Alex Simmons Scott Merritt Simmons left Gardner-Webb on April 6, 2023, after 5 seasons to take the Memphis head coaching job.[128] Wisconsin associate head coach Merritt was hired by the Runnin' Bulldogs on April 22.[129]
Georgetown James Howard Tasha Butts Less than a week after parting ways with Patrick Ewing, Georgetown announced on March 13, 2023, that Howard's contract will not be renewed after 6 seasons, in which the Hoyas went 66–108 overall capped off by 4 straight losing seasons.[130] Georgia Tech associate head coach Butts was hired on April 11.[131]
Grambling State Freddie Murray Courtney Simmons Grambling State parted ways with Murray on March 20, 2023, after 7 seasons and a 93–115 record.[132] Troy assistant coach and recruiting coordinator Simmons was hired by the Tigers on April 6.[133]
Idaho Jon Newlee Carrie Eighmey Idaho and Newlee mutually agreed to part ways on April 6, 2023, after 15 seasons.[134] D-II Nebraska–Kearney head coach Eighmey was hired by the Vandals on April 28.[135]
Iona Billi Chambers Angelika Szumilo Chambers departed Iona on April 5, 2023, after 10 seasons for the Xavier head coaching job.[136] Fairleigh Dickinson head coach Szumilo was hired by the Gaels on April 17.[122]
Jacksonville Darnell Haney Special Jennings Jacksonville announced a mutual parting of ways with Haney on March 15, 2023, after 5 seasons.[137] On April 10, the Dolphins hired Jennings from Montverde Academy as his replacement.[138]
Lindenwood Katie Falco Amy Eagan Lindenwood parted ways with Falco on March 17, 2023, after 5 seasons.[139] The Lions hired Eagan, head coach at D-II Drury the past 3 years, on March 28.[140]
Long Beach State Jeff Cammon Amy Wright Cammon left Long Beach State on March 29, 2023, after 5 seasons for Saint Mary's.[141] Oklahoma assistant coach and recruiting coordinator Wright was hired by the Beach on April 17.[142]
Louisiana–Monroe Brooks Donald-Williams Missy Bilderback Donald-Williams announced her resignation on March 7, 2023, after 4 seasons at ULM.[143] The Warhawks went to the NJCAA for their next coach, hiring Jones County JC head coach Missy Bilderback on March 29.[144]
Marist Brian Giorgis Erin Doughty Giorgis announced his retirement on February 28, 2022, effective after the 2022–23 season. During his 22-year tenure at Marist, Giorgis led the Red Foxes to 13 MAAC regular-season and 11 tournament titles, most recently for both in 2021, and also had coached the program to five NCAA tournament victories, the most for any coach in MAAC history. Top assistant Doughty, who had also played under Giorgis at Marist, was designated as his successor.[145]
Marshall Tony Kemper Kim Stephens Kemper left Marshall on March 10, 2023, after 6 seasons for the head coaching job at Central Arkansas.[110] Stephens, head coach at D-II Glenville State for the past 7 seasons, was hired by the Thundering Herd on March 27.[146]
Memphis Katrina Merriweather Alex Simmons Merriweather left Memphis on March 25, 2023, after 2 seasons for the head coaching job at her alma mater Cincinnati.[116] On April 6, the Tigers hired Gardner-Webb head coach Simmons as her replacement.[128]
Miami (OH) DeUnna Hendrix Glenn Box Hendrix resigned from Miami on April 26, 2023, after 4 seasons, later revealing that an investigation into an inappropriate relationship that Hendrix had with a player led to her resignation.[147][148] Indiana associate head coach Box was hired by the Redhawks on May 8.[149]
Michigan State Suzy Merchant Robyn Fralick Michigan State announced a mutual agreement on March 13, 2023, for Merchant to step down as head coach after 16 seasons for health reasons. Merchant, who had been diagnosed with a heart abnormality after collapsing during a 2017 game, had not coached since a January 2023 car crash following a medical incident.[150] She led the Spartans to a 327–186 record during her tenure along with 10 trips to the NCAA Tournament.[151] Bowling Green head coach Fralick was hired as her replacement on March 31.[105]
Minnesota Lindsay Whalen Dawn Plitzuweit Whalen announced that she was stepping down as head coach of Minnesota on March 2, 2023, after 5 seasons, but will remain with the school as special assistant to the AD through April 2025.[152] West Virginia head coach Plitzuweit was hired by the Golden Gophers on March 18 after leading the Mountaineers to the NCAA tournament in her lone season there.[153]
New Orleans Keeshawn Davenport Trelanne Powell Davenport announced her resignation from her alma mater on March 16, 2023, after 12 seasons.[154] Trelanne Powell, head coach at D-II Tuskegee University, was hired by the Privateers on April 11.[155]
Nicholls DoBee Plaisance Justin Payne Plaisance announced her resignation from Nicholls, effective April 30, on March 9, 2023, after 15 seasons.[156] D-II Georgia Southwestern head coach and former Nicholls men's basketball player Payne was hired by the Colonels on March 31.[157]
Northeastern Bridgette Mitchell Priscilla Edwards Mitchell left Northeastern on April 7, 2023, after 2 seasons for the Fordham head coaching job.[158] Clemson assistant coach Edwards was hired by the Huskies on April 20.[159]
North Florida Darrick Gibbs Erika Lambert North Florida fired Gibbs on March 2, 2023, after 8 seasons.[160] Abilene Christian associate head coach and recruiting coordinator Lambert was hired by the Ospreys on April 6.[161]
North Texas Jalie Mitchell Jason Burton Mitchell announced her departure from North Texas on March 20, 2023, after 8 seasons.[162] Texas A&M–Commerce head coach Burton was hired by the Mean Green on March 27.[163]
Pepperdine Kristen Dowling Brian Rosario Tim Hays Dowling announced her resignation from Pepperdine on February 27, 2023, after 4 seasons. Waves assistant coach Rosario was named interim head coach of the team for the WCC Tournament.[164] After the season ended, the school hired Colorado assistant Hays on April 4.[165]
Pitt Lance White Tory Verdi Pitt parted ways with White on March 3, 2023, after a 42–99 record in 5 seasons.[166] The Panthers hired UMass head coach Verdi as his replacement on April 7.[167]
Providence Jim Crowley Erin Batth Crowley and Providence mutually agreed to part ways on March 7, 2023, after 7 seasons.[168] On March 20, the Friars named Michigan assistant coach Batth as his replacement.[169]
Sacramento State Mark Campbell Aaron Kallhoff Campbell left Sac State on March 21, 2023, after 2 seasons for the TCU head coaching job.[170] BYU assistant Kallhoff was hired by the Hornets on April 17.[171]
St. Bonaventure Jesse Fleming Erica Morrow Jim Crowley St. Bonaventure fired Fleming on January 15, 2023 after 6½ seasons, in which the Bonnies went 53–135 overall, including a 3–17 record to start this season. Assistant coach Morrow, in her first season on the staff, was named interim head coach for the remainder of the season.[172] After the season, the school brought back former head coach Crowley, having served in that role from 2000 to 2016 before leaving for Providence.[173]
St. Francis Brooklyn Linda Cimino None St. Francis College announced on March 20, 2023, that it was eliminating its entire athletic program at the end of the spring season.[23]
Saint Mary's Paul Thomas Allyson Fasnacht Jeff Cammon Thomas, on paid administrative leave since late December, was fired on January 31, 2023 after 16½ seasons at Saint Mary's. Assistant coach Fasnacht, who was serving as the Gaels' interim head coach during Thomas's initial leave, continued in that role for the rest of the season.[174] After the season ended, Long Beach State head coach was hired on March 29.[141]
Seattle Suzy Barcomb Skyler Young Seattle announced on March 20, 2023, that Barcomb will not return next season, ending her 7-year tenure.[175] The Redhawks hired Portland assistant Young on April 19.[176]
South Alabama Terry Fowler Yolisha Jackson Fowler was relieved of his head coaching duties on March 1, 2023, after 10 seasons at South Alabama.[177] South Florida assistant coach Jackson was hired by the Jaguars on March 24.[178]
Stephen F. Austin Mark Kellogg Leonard Bishop Kellogg left Stephen F. Austin on April 3, 2023, after 8 seasons for the West Virginia head coaching job.[179] Ladyjacks associate head coach Bishop was promoted to the position on April 14.[180]
Tarleton Misty Wilson Bill Brock Tarleton parted ways with Wilson on March 2, 2023, after 9 seasons.[181] The Texans initially hired former longtime Baylor assistant Brock, who spent last season as head coach at NJCAA McLennan CC, on March 14, but did not make it official until March 27.[182]
TCU Raegan Pebley Mark Campbell Pebley announced on February 27, 2023, that she would step down from her position after the season, her 9th at TCU.[183] Sacramento State head coach Campbell was hired by the Horned Frogs on March 21.[170]
Texas A&M–Commerce Jason Burton Valerie King Burton departed Texas A&M–Commerce after 9 seasons on March 27, 2023, for the North Texas head coaching job.[163] New Mexico associate head coach King was named the new head coach of the Lions on April 19.[184]
UMass Tory Verdi Mike Leflar Verdi left UMass on April 7, 2023, after 6 seasons for the Pitt head coaching position.[167] The Minutewomen promoted associate head coach Leflar to the position 3 days later.[185]
UTEP Kevin Baker Keitha Adams Baker announced his resignation on April 5, 2023, after 6 seasons at UTEP.[186] Keitha Adams, head coach of the Miners from 2001 to 2017 before leaving for Wichita State, was re-hired on April 11.[187]
Weber State Velaida Harris Jenteal Jackson Harris stepped down from her position on March 10, 2023, after 5 seasons at Weber State.[188] D2 Westminster College (UT) head coach Jackson was hired by the Wildcats on April 12.[189]
West Virginia Dawn Plitzuweit Mark Kellogg Plitzuweit departed West Virginia on March 18, 2023, for Minnesota after reaching the NCAA tournament in her lone season as head coach of the Mountaineers.[153] Stephen F. Austin head coach Kellogg was hired on April 3.[179]
Wichita State Keitha Adams Terry Nooner Adams left Wichita State on April 11, 2023, after 6 seasons to return to UTEP.[187] The Shockers stayed in state for their next hire, naming Kansas associate head coach Nooner as her replacement on April 17.[190]
Xavier Melanie Moore Billi Chambers Moore and Xavier mutually agreed to part ways on March 6, 2023, after 4 seasons and a 24–81 record.[191] Iona head coach Chambers was hired by the Musketeers on April 5.[136]

See also

Notes

    References

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    115. "UC Athletics Announces Women's Basketball Change in Leadership" (Press release). Cincinnati Bearcats. March 7, 2023. Retrieved March 7, 2023.
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    119. "Delaware State Athletics Announces Coaching Hires" (Press release). Mid-Eastern Atlantic Conference. June 23, 2023. Retrieved July 29, 2023.
    120. "ETSU to fire women's basketball head coach". Johnson City Press. August 1, 2022. Archived from the original on August 2, 2022. Retrieved August 2, 2022.
    121. "ETSU names Brenda Mock Brown women's basketball head coach" (Press release). East Tennessee State Buccaneers. August 8, 2022. Archived from the original on August 13, 2022. Retrieved August 13, 2022.
    122. Clark, Jack (April 17, 2023). "Angelika Szumilo Named Iona WBB Head Coach" (Press release). Iona Gaels. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
    123. Sarnoff, Jordan (April 21, 2023). "Gaitley Named Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Fairleigh Dickinson Knights. Retrieved April 21, 2023.
    124. "Florida A&M's Shalon Pillow Resigns as Head Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). Florida A&M Lady Rattlers. July 6, 2023. Retrieved July 8, 2023.
    125. "Florida A&M Athletics Named Bridgette Gordon as Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Florida A&M Lady Rattlers. July 28, 2023. Retrieved July 29, 2023.
    126. "ACC Hires Jackie Carson as Senior Associate Commissioner for Women's Basketball" (Press release). Atlantic Coast Conference. June 8, 2023. Retrieved June 9, 2023.
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    128. "Alex Simmons Named as Memphis Tiger Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Memphis Tigers. April 6, 2023. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
    129. "Gardner-Webb Names Scott Merritt As Head Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). Gardner-Webb Runnin' Bulldogs. April 22, 2023. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
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    134. "University of Idaho and Head Coach Jon Newlee Mutually Agree to Part Ways" (Press release). Idaho Vandals. April 6, 2023. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
    135. "Carrie Eighmey Named Idaho Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Idaho Vandals. April 28, 2023. Retrieved April 28, 2023.
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    143. "Williams Steps Down as ULM Women's Head Basketball Coach" (Press release). Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks. March 7, 2023. Retrieved March 7, 2023.
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    146. "Kim Stephens To Lead Marshall Women's Basketball" (Press release). Marshall Thundering Herd. March 27, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
    147. "Hendrix Resigns as Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Miami RedHawks. April 26, 2023. Retrieved April 27, 2023.
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    149. "Box Named Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Miami RedHawks. May 8, 2023. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
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    152. "Whalen Steps Down as Head Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). Minnesota Golden Gophers. March 2, 2023. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
    153. "Plitzuweit Named Women's Basketball Head Coach". Minnesota Golden Gophers. March 18, 2023. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
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    158. "Bridgette Mitchell to Lead Fordham Women's Basketball" (Press release). Fordham Rams. April 7, 2023. Retrieved April 7, 2023.
    159. "Northeastern Welcomes Priscilla Edwards As Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Northeastern Huskies. April 20, 2023. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
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    161. "Erika Lambert Tabbed to Lead UNF Women's Basketball Program" (Press release). North Florida Ospreys. April 6, 2023. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
    162. "Jalie Mitchell Departs as Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). North Texas Mean Green. March 20, 2023. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
    163. "Jason Burton named Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). North Texas Mean Green. March 27, 2023. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
    164. "Pepperdine's Dowling Steps Down as Head Coach" (Press release). Pepperdine Waves. February 27, 2023. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
    165. "Tim Hays Hired to Lead Waves Hoops Program" (Press release). Pepperdine Waves. April 4, 2023. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
    166. "Head Coaching Change Announced for Pitt Women's Basketball" (Press release). Pittsburgh Panthers. March 3, 2023. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
    167. "Tory Verdi Tabbed To Lead Pitt Women's Basketball Program" (Press release). Pittsburgh Panthers. April 7, 2023. Retrieved April 7, 2023.
    168. "Providence College And Head Coach Jim Crowley Mutually Agree To Part Ways" (Press release). Providence Friars. March 7, 2023. Retrieved March 7, 2023.
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    170. "Campbell Named Head Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). TCU Horned Frogs. March 21, 2023. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
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    174. "SMC Parts Ways With Head Coach Paul Thomas" (Press release). Saint Mary's Gaels. January 31, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
    175. "Seattle University Announces Change in Women's Basketball Staff" (Press release). Seattle Redhawks. March 20, 2023. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
    176. "Skyler Young Named Head Coach of Seattle University Women's Basketball" (Press release). Seattle Redhawks. April 19, 2023. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
    177. "Jags make leadership change in women's basketball" (Press release). South Alabama Jaguars. March 1, 2023. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
    178. "Yolisha Jackson named South Alabama Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). South Alabama Jaguars. March 24, 2023. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
    179. Fragale, Michael (April 3, 2023). "Mark Kellogg Named Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). West Virginia Mountaineers. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
    180. Crittenden, Wally (April 14, 2023). "Leonard Bishop Named Head Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks. Retrieved April 15, 2023.
    181. "Tarleton parts ways with WBB head coach Misty Wilson" (Press release). Tarleton Texans. March 2, 2023. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
    182. Quillan, Kurtis (March 14, 2023). "Tarleton set to hire McLennan Community College women's basketball coach". KCEN-TV. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
    183. Philippou, Alexa (February 27, 2023). "TCU coach Raegan Pebley to step down at end of season". ESPN. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
    184. "Valerie King named A&M-Commerce Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Texas A&M–Commerce Lions. April 19, 2023. Retrieved April 19, 2023.
    185. "Mike Leflar Elevated To Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). UMass Minutewomen. April 10, 2023. Retrieved April 10, 2023.
    186. "UTEP Women's Basketball Coach Kevin Baker Resigns" (Press release). UTEP Miners. April 5, 2023. Retrieved April 5, 2023.
    187. "Keitha Adams Returning as UTEP Women's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). UTEP Miners. April 11, 2023. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
    188. "Velaida Harris steps down as WSU women's basketball head coach". Weber State Wildcats. March 10, 2023. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
    189. Grua, Paul (April 12, 2023). "Jenteal Jackson named Weber State women's basketball head coach" (Press release). Weber State Wildcats. Retrieved April 13, 2023.
    190. "Wichita State Names Nooner Head Women's Basketball Coach" (Press release). Wichita State Shockers. April 17, 2023. Retrieved April 18, 2023.
    191. "Moore Tenure Wraps Up for Xavier Women's Basketball" (Press release). Xavier Musketeers. March 6, 2023. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
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