Women's Mar. Madness 2025: Full Sweet 16 match schedule
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Los Angeles Daily News |
The big news over the weekend was the season-ending injury to Southern California’s JuJu Watkins, costing the tournament one of its brightest stars and dropping the Trojans out of the betting favorit...
USA Today |
Every Saturday game can be seen on TBS and TruTV.
U.S. News & World Report |
Florida already eliminated two-time defending NCAA champion UConn in the second round and is 10-1 in regional semifinals.
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Nothing like a conference rivalry matchup to instantly turn up the heat in the Sweet 16. Duke and UNC split their two games this season, each winning at home. The Tar Heels’ victory was a low-scoring overtime affair, 53-46, as only two of the 20 total players reached double figures.
The 2025 Women’s NCAA Tournament begins on Wednesday, March 19 and runs through Sunday, April 6. See below for everything you need to know about the women’s tournament, including the full schedule, scores, tournament sites, and additional information on how you can watch and stream every moment of the 2025 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament.
Last year, there were only four brackets that remained perfect after the first two rounds of the women’s tournament.
All you need to know for March Madness women's tournament, which runs from selections on March 17 through the championship on April 7.
The NCAA Women's Tournament resumes Friday with the Sweet 16 as teams look to punch their ticket to the Elite Eight. All four No. 1 seeds remain, but USC will have to keep dancing without its best player after JuJu Watkins suffered a torn ACL in the second round.
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The women's NCAA Tournament advances to the Sweet 16 with eight exciting matchups. Here is the schedule and a printable bracket to join in the action.
The 2025 women's NCAA Tournament has reached the Sweet 16. We've got a strong four-game slate today that includes a heated rivalry and two top seeds in action: No. 2 Duke vs. No. 3 UNC, No. 1 South Carolina vs.
I'm actually tied for first place. That's because I didn't pick them myself. AI did, and wouldn't you know, it went 28 for 32 in the first round and 14 for 16 in the second round.
Fans of Oregon State will recognize at least one familiar face in Oklahoma standout Raegan Beers, who has helped lead a program to a second straight Sweet 16 after helping the Beavers a year ago. Though Beers has been strong, the Huskies have run away from their opponents through two rounds and look too dominant to stop.