As women’s college basketball continues to expand in both audience and investment, programs across the sport have new opportunities to earn a national presence. This year’s First Four play-in is the 2025 NCAA Tournament’s opening salvo, but it’s also some form of celebration for a deeper game. UC San Diego made the field in its first year of eligibility for the Division I tournament. William & Mary qualified for its first time ever, and it’s the second berth for High Point.
The headliner is a different type of ascendant. Iowa State’s Audi Crooks had an All-American-worthy campaign, averaging more than 23 points per game on better than 60 percent shooting. She just got a SLAM Magazine cover and has been dominating opposing paints from the jump. Her Cyclones have a tough draw with Princeton, which has danced in three consecutive seasons and has five conference losses in five years.
Team profiles written by The Athletic’s Michael Waterloo.
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No. 11 Iowa State vs. No. 11 Princeton
Winner plays No. 6 Michigan
Iowa State: Iowa State had a huge win over Kansas State to end the regular season, so it can hang with tough teams. But against top 15 opponents, the Cyclones lost seven games by an average of 19.7 points. Audi Crooks is an elite player, but she won’t be enough to carry the Cyclones to a deep run.
Princeton: Princeton is making its fourth straight NCAA Tournament appearance after advancing to the second round in 2021-2022 and 2022-2023. If it can control the pace and its defense shows up, it can do it again. But it’s a huge if.
No. 16 UC San Diego vs. No. 16 Southern
Winner plays No. 1 UCLA
UC San Diego: The program has been around for five years, and this is its first season being eligible for the NCAA Tournament. This is its first winning season, and it took a conference tournament run to reach this point. Celebrate this, UC San Diego fans. The NCAA Tournament outcome doesn’t matter.
Southern: Southern overcame a brutal start to the season, where it lost 12 of its first 13 games — 10 of which were against teams in the top 80 in the country. The talent disparity was evident in those games, and its only close losses — 8 points total — came against two teams ranked outside of the top 300. That’s not a coincidence.
No. 11 Columbia vs. No. 11 Washington
Winner plays No. 6 West Virginia
Columbia: Columbia’s defense is legit, but its top win was over No. 43 Harvard. A first-weekend exit is in the cards.
Washington: Washington has lost to some fantastic teams this season, including (ranked at the time) No. 7 LSU, No. 4 UCLA, No. 22 Utah, No. 25 Michigan State, No. 21 Iowa, No. 16 Ohio State, No. 24 Maryland and No. 6 USC. The problem is, even though some of those losses were close, Washington’s best win was against No. 38 Illinois — which is OK. But the Huskies haven’t shown the ability to win key games, which will limit them during the tournament.
No. 16 High Point vs. No. 16 William & Mary
Winner plays No. 1 Texas
High Point: This is High Point’s second NCAA Tournament appearance after it lost to UConn 102-59 in 2021. The showing may not be that bad this time around, but a loss is still a loss.
William & Mary: It’s the school’s first NCAA Tournament ever. Just let them have this enjoyment.
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(Photo of Audi Crooks and Iowa State: David Purdy / Getty Images)