Here is the 2025 Women's NCAA Tournament. March Madness should be a lot of fun as the parity levels of sports are rising this year. There are not one true singular Goliath, but many Davids who are aiming to make their mark.
South Carolina looked like a favorite after raiding the SEC tournament, winning with double figures in each game at Greenville. However, we cannot count the three teams that beat the Gamecocks in the regular season. uconnTexas and UCLA. Similarly, the only team to beat the Bruins was USC, led by superstar guard Juju Watkins.
Other candidates who appear to be likely to create a Final Four are: Notre DameNorth Carolina State and League Tournament Champion Duke TCU and LSU He seems to have the talent necessary for his run to the Final Four. And when you're choosing to mess, don't overlook other mid-major powers like the Ivy League or Fairfield, Norfolk, or South Florida.
The Women's NCAA Tournament will begin on Wednesday, March 19th with the first four matches. The national championship will be set for Sunday, April 6th in Tampa, Florida.
Download blank 2025 women's NCAA Tournament printable brackets here.
Important dates for March Madness
Here are the dates you need to know at the 2025 Women's NCAA Tournament:
- Select Sunday: March 16th
- First 4:March 19th-20th (Campus Site)
- First round:March 21st to 22nd (Campus Site)
- 32 rounds:March 23rd to 24th (Campus Site)
- Sweet 16: March 28th-29th (Birmingham, Alabama and Spokane, Washington)
- Elite Eight: March 30th – 31st (Birmingham, Alabama and Spokane, Washington)
- Final Four: April 4th, Tampa, Florida, 7pm (the second game will tip off 30 minutes after the first game ends)
- National Championship Game: April 6th, 6:30pm, Tampa, Florida
Simple facts
A year ago, South Carolina won his third national championship with Dawnstay as head coach.
The last four took place in Tampa in 2019, with the semi-finals that included Baylor, Notre Dame, Turmeric and Oregon. Kim Mulkey's bear narrowly beat the Irishman in Muffett McGraw for the third national title in program history.
Women's college basketball hasn't seen repeated champions since Geno Auriemma's UConn (with Breanna Stewart) won four straight wins between 2013 and 2016.
When Harvard confused Stanford in the first round of the 1998 tournament, the 16th seed defeated first place in women's basketball.
Since the women's tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1994, the 15 seeds have never won second place in 120 attempts. The same applies to seed No. 14 for the third second.



