As the 2025 Womenโs Basketball Tournament prepares for its Final Four, itโs clear that the remaining teams have been college basketballโs elite teams all season.
The sportโs most decorated program in UConn, hard-nosed Texas, breakout Final Four first-timer UCLA and defending national champion South Carolina converge in Tampa with a combined 138 wins between them this season.
As the teams look to notch two more wins in order to capture the national championship, the following 11 players are poised to determine which of these dominant squads will leave Florida with the title.
โPaige Bueckers, UConn, and Lauren Betts, UCLA
Beginning with the two most obvious candidates, Paige Bueckers and Lauren Betts have been two of college basketballโs most outstanding players all season.
In Bueckersโ case, she arrived on the scene as one of the most highly touted recruits in womenโs basketball โ one reason that UConn coach Geno Auriemma said following the teamโs Elite Eight win over Southern California that no other Huskies player had faced as much scrutiny in their career than her.
However, Bueckers immediately lived up to the hype with AP Player of the Year honors in 2021 and has only grown as a player despite injuries.
As excellent as Bueckers has been, she has taken her game to another level in this NCAA Tournament. She carries a three-game streak of scoring at least 31 points into the Final Four, including matching her career high with 34 in the second round against South Dakota State, only to break it the next game with 40 against Oklahoma.
Bueckersโ outburst against the Sooners also set a program record for the most points in the NCAA Tournament. Given the star power to come through Storrs over the last few decades, thatโs quite a record.
Betts matched Bueckers with consecutive 30-plus-point games in the second round and Sweet 16, doing so while shooting a combined 29 of 33 from the floor. She also posted double-doubles against both Richmond and Ole Miss.
Betts averages almost a double-double for the season with 20.0 points and 9.6 rebounds per game, but perhaps the most telling stat underscoring her importance to UCLAโs championship run is her 2.6 assists per game. Bettsโ ability to pass out of the post in the face of double- and triple-teams often makes opponents pay for keying in on her.
โSarah Strong, UConn
National Freshman of the Year Sarah Strong faces her most daunting challenge of a remarkable debut season. Strong comes into the Final Four averaging 16.1 points and 8.8 rebounds per game, following her 22-point, 17-rebound effort in the Elite Eight.
Strongโs ability to work the glass in particular is critical โ as is keeping Betts off the boards. Strongโs presence in the interior remains pivotal beyond the UCLA matchup, with potential matchups against Texas or South Carolina, two teams with dominant inside presences.
And indeed, Strongโs 16 points and 13 rebounds were vital to a UConn rout of South Carolina in February.
โAzzi Fudd, UConn
Scoreless through three quarters in the Elite Eight, Fudd sank a pair of 3-pointers to fuel a fourth-quarter run that helped put away Southern California. That stretch offered a snapshot of the veteran guardโs X-factor as UConnโs potential third weapon behind Bueckers and Strong.
Her 28 points against South Carolina provide another glimpse at Fuddโs importance against top-tier competition.
โKiki Rice, UCLA
The versatile Rice sets the tone for the Bruinsโ entire offensive identity with her court vision and uncanny distribution.
Rice averages 5.1 assists per game, though she comes into the Final Four on a streak of five straight games in which sheโs tallied at least seven assists. Sheโs also a dangerous scoring threat at 12.9 points per game, with a 3-point shooting average north of 36 percent.
โGabriela Jaquez, UCLA
Her clutch 3-pointer effectively put away LSU in UCLAโs Elite Eight win, putting an exclamation point on an 18-point effort. The shot also contributed to a stretch in which Jaquez has hit multiple 3-pointers in four of the Bruinsโ last seven games.
Having that option is invaluable for UCLA in spreading the floor to take pressure off of Betts.
โJoyce Edwards, South Carolina
The freshman phenom stepped into some long shadows when she filled the interior role once occupied by South Carolina stars Aliyah Boston and Kamilla Cardoso. Boston and Cardoso were both central to national championship runs.
While Edwardsโ 12.7 points per game lead the Gamecocks for the season, she heads to Tampa on a bit of a slump, with just 15 combined points over South Carolinaโs last three games.
Coach Dawn Staley has built a winning program not reliant on an individual star to carry the load, a fact made plainly evident in South Carolinaโs hard-fought wins over Indiana, Maryland, and Duke. The increasing stakes of the Final Four and the strength of the fieldโs frontcourts call on Edwards to step up.
โChloe Kitts, South Carolina
A teamโs management of the paint and boards may be the most significant factor in winning the 2025 national championship. To that end, Kitts has been sensational on South Carolinaโs run to a fifth straight Final Four.
Kitts posted double-doubles against both Indiana and Maryland and came one rebound shy of another when South Carolina last saw semifinal opponent Texas in the SEC Championship.
โRaven Johnson, South Carolina
Despite having less of a scoring role for the Gamecocks this season, Johnson could be a huge part of their push for a repeat.
Her versatility is invaluable, particularly Johnsonโs tenacious defense. She is adept at forcing pressure on the ball to create turnovers and is athletic enough to protect the rim as a shot-blocker, with three blocks over the last two contests.
โTaylor Jones, Texas
The veteran post player joined Texas from Oregon State and immediately made as much of an impact for the Longhorns as she had with the Beavers. Jones may have delivered her most impactful effort yet in the Elite Eight, helping shut down standout TCU center Sedona Prince.
As the Longhorns face South Carolina for the fourth time this season, Jonesโ defensive presence against the talented Gamecocks frontcourt takes center stage. She had four steals when Texas knocked off South Carolina in February and needs similar showings in the semifinals and potential matchups with UCLA or UConn.
โMadison Booker, Texas
The biggest stage calls for the biggest stars to shine. Texas has flourished this season through a combination of salty defensive effort and offensive depth, with players like Kyla Oldacre and Rori Harmon capable of stepping up to score big as needed.
However, thereโs no question Booker is the star of this Texas lineup. Headed to a likely second All-America selection in as many years, Booker rides a streak of nine straight and 19 of 20 games scoring in double figures.
Her consistency is the cornerstone of a Texas offense that complements a 55.7-point per game defense with a 78.4-point per game offense.
โKyle Kensing, Field Level Media
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