NCAA Women’s Tournament 2025: UConn and South Carolina dominate, set to meet in final

The 2025 NCAA Women’s Tournament continued Friday with Final Four action in Tampa, Florida.
[Read more: 2025 Women’s March Madness Schedule: Dates, locations, channels, how to watch]
First, South Carolina kept its title defense alive as it dominated fellow No. 1 seed Texas. Gamecocks head coach Dawn Staley will now compete for her fourth NCAA title, while freshman star forward Joyce Edwards seeks her first.
Later, No. 2 seed UConn made it look easy, overwhelming top-seeded UCLA from the jump. Freshman Sarah Strong showed her sharp-shooting chops, while Paige Bueckers earned her second trip to the National Championship Game.
Here were the highlights!
No. 2 seed UConn continues its dominance with a end-to-end rout of No. 1 seed UCLA
Sarah Strong and Azzi Fudd didn’t even need much help from superstar Paige Bueckers to propel UConn into the national title game, leading the Huskies to a remarkably easy 85-51 victory over UCLA on Friday night in the Final Four of the women’s NCAA Tournament.
Strong finished with 22 points and Fudd scored all of her 19 points in the first half for the second-seeded Huskies, who are one win away from their 12th national championship and first since the team won four straight from 2013-16, led by Breanna Stewart. The eight-year title drought is the longest for the Huskies since they won their first in 1995.
UConn will face defending champion South Carolina on Sunday for the title after the Gamecocks beat Texas 74-57 earlier Friday night. It’s a rematch of the 2022 championship game, which the Gamecocks won 64-49. The teams met in February and UConn shocked South Carolina with a 29-point road victory.
Bueckers, the likely top pick in next month’s WNBA draft, finished with 16 points after topping 30 in each of the previous three games for the Huskies (36-3).
All-America center Lauren Betts scored 26 points for top overall seed UCLA (34-3).
UConn got off to a hot start with Strong and Fudd leading the way. Even when shots looked off, they found their way in. Fudd, one of the best shooters in the country, banked in a 3-pointer from the top of the key, prompting Auriemma to throw his arms in the air and smile.
The Huskies led 23-13 at the end of the first quarter. They continued the onslaught behind Fudd to open a 42-22 advantage at the break. Bueckers had the play of the half with a touch pass in the air to Kaitlyn Chen for a layup late in the second quarter.
UCLA never threatened in the second half as the 6-foot-7 Betts had little help.
The Bruins fell short in their first appearance in the NCAA Final Four. UCLA won a national title in 1978 in the pre-NCAA era of women’s basketball. The Bruins were looking to become the first team from the Big Ten, a conference they joined this season, to win a championship since Purdue did it in 1999.
UCLA cruised through its best regular season, earning the No. 1 ranking in the AP Top 25 for the first time and holding the spot for 14 weeks.
The Bruins only lost twice this year before Friday, both to JuJu Watkins and USC. UCLA got a measure of revenge by beating USC to win the Big Ten Tournament in its first year in the league after the dismantling of the Pac-12. The Bruins set a program record for wins in a season and won 23 consecutive games, including 22 in a row by double digits.
Defending national champion and No. 1 seed South Carolina returns to title game after rout of fellow No. 1 seed Texas
Defending national champion South Carolina left no doubt it would return to the title game, getting 14 points from Te-Hina Paopao and overwhelming Texas on Friday night, 74-57, in the Final Four of the women’s NCAA Tournament.
The Gamecocks are a win away from becoming the first team to secure consecutive titles since UConn won four straight from 2013-16.
Edwards added 13 points, 11 rebounds and six assists for South Carolina (35-3), which used its experience and poise to weather an early deficit and took control with its depth at both ends of the floor.
Three South Carolina players finished in double figures — Bree Hall had 11 points — and the Gamecocks dominated Texas in the post with 40 points in the paint to the Longhorns’ 22.
Madison Booker had 11 points and three fouls for the Longhorns (35-4), who were trying to reach their first championship since 1986. They were in the Final Four for the first time since 2003 after a dominant season, which was their first in the SEC after coming over from the Big 12.
Reporting by The Associated Press.
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