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As of the most recent college basketball season in 2023–24, 360 women's college basketball programs competed in NCAA Division I, including full D-I members and programs transitioning from a lower NCAA division (most from Division II and one from Division III) [1] Four schools (Bellarmine, Tarleton, UC San Diego, and Utah Tech) will complete transitions from Division II at the end of the 2023 ...
The South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball team represents the University of South Carolina and competes in the Southeastern Conference (SEC). Under current head coach Dawn Staley, the Gamecocks have been one of the top programs in the country, winning the NCAA Championship in 2017, 2022, and 2024. The program also enjoyed success under ...
The Wildcats have four Elite Eight appearances and seventeen appearances in the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament. They have won the SEC tournament twice and SEC regular season championship once. The first University of Kentucky women's basketball team was organized in 1902, [3] [4] and competed for the first time on Feb. 21, 1903 ...
This is a list of current Women's National Basketball Association head coaches. Coaches. Yrs: Years coached GC: ... Coach Since Team Career Regular season
September 23, 2024 at 7:00 AM. When Kenny Brooks set out to make his first Kentucky women’s basketball nonconference schedule, he kept one thing in mind — make it challenging but not ...
Kim Mulkey. Kimberly Duane Mulkey is an American college basketball coach and former player. Since 2021, she has been the head coach for Louisiana State University 's women's basketball team. A Pan-American gold medalist in 1983 and Olympic gold medalist in 1984, she is the first coach in NCAA basketball history to win national championships as ...
Nell Fortner (born March 3, 1959) [1] is the current women's college basketball coach at Georgia Tech. She is most well known for leading the 2000 Olympics team to a gold medal. She has received numerous awards including the 1997 National Coach of the Year, the 2000 USA Basketball Coach of the Year and the 2008 SEC Coach of the Year.
Abrahamson-Henderson attended Washington High School in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, graduating in 1985. She was a basketball player, averaging 44 points per game [3] and earning a place (1992) in the Washington Warriors Hall of Fame. [4] She was named an All-American on both the Parade and USA Today teams, and ranked as one of the top five basketball ...