The second day of the tournament is underway for the women’s NCAA Tournament. Few upsets so far as Georgia has been the only higher seed to lose so far. But lots of strong performances have been on display, including an eight-steal day from Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo. Iowa was tested in the first round, and the no-call at the end of regulation will be debated by Clemson fans for years.
Follow along for highlights from the day:
No. 9 USC 71, No. 8 Clemson 67
Up next in Round 2: No. 1 South Carolina
It took well into the second day of Round 1, but the Tigers and Trojans delivered the most exciting game of the tournament thus far thanks to an overtime thriller that now has the Trojans onto the second round, where No. 1 seed South Carolina awaits.
Much of the attention is trained on a controversial no-call at the end of regulation. Tied at 61-61 with 4.4 seconds to play, Clemson inbounded the ball just in front of the USC bench to senior guard Mia Moore, who drove the length of the court and heaved up a deep 3-pointer on the right side to potentially win. Her shot went in and the Clemson faithful in the stands immediately erupted.
On Moore’s shot, the nearest official also called a foul. After a lengthy review, officials determined that both her shot and the foul occurred just after time expired. USC still had a chance. Overtime ensued.
Clemson coach Shawn Poppie said he tried to motivate his team as much as possible heading into overtime, but that it was difficult after such an emotional swing.
“They had just thought they had won. Whether they count the basket or Mia goes to the free-throw line and they have no time-outs, everything in their mind is, ‘We just won a first round game,’” Poppie said. “You just try to motivate them as much as you can that ‘For whatever reason, we have to go back out there. Let’s prove that although this might take 45 minutes, we’re the better basketball team.’ It’s easier said than done. You can motivate all you want, but there’s a question mark in their minds as they go out there.”
Officials reviewed the time of the entire play, including using stopwatches to pinpoint that the timing was correct.
“I had no idea,” Poppie said, asked if he understood the situation when officials called him over to provide an explanation. “I thought they were just reviewing, ‘Did she get the shot off in time? And if not, when did the foul occur?’ I had no idea they took a stopwatch over there … I had no idea that was going on. Obviously it was a little bit of a shock because we had no clue until that point.”
That’s when USC freshman guard Jazzy Davidson — who poured in 31 points — essentially called game and hit two more 3-pointers to boost the Trojans past the Tigers 71-67. Davidson, who was just one point shy of tying her career high for points, was sensational for the Trojans and played all 45 minutes. Davidson finished with six rebounds and five assists. Senior guard Kara Dunn added 22 points on 7-of-11 shooting from the field and a 4-of-7 shooting on 3-pointers.
The Tigers’ early exit, especially in this manner, will be tough to swallow in the coming days. They no doubt would have loved another crack at rival South Carolina on Monday, playing in the two teams’ home state as the Gamecocks earned hosting duties.
Poppie seems to have the program moving in the right direction. The Tigers’ NCAA Tournament berth was their first appearance in seven years and just their second in the past 25. Last month, Poppie signed a contract extension through 2030-31, and the Tigers just signed their best recruiting class in program history, a top-five class, per 247Sports.
USC will see South Carolina again Monday. Without JuJu Watkins, who has sat out this season after suffering an ACL tear in last season’s tournament, the Trojans didn’t have enough answers for the Gamecocks when they met in November. South Carolina won by 17.
Trojans coach Lindsay Gottlieb isn’t focusing on who she doesn’t have.
“We’re really invested in this season and what we can do. And I still believe our team has yet one more level that we can get to,” she said at the end of the regular season. “We can ruin someone else’s party on their home floor and I think that’s what we’re trying to do.” — Grace Raynor
No. 9 Syracuse 72, No. 8 Iowa State 63
Up next in Round 2: No. 1 UConn
Ever since Audi Crooks burst onto the national scene with a 40-point NCAA Tournament debut to spearhead a 20-point comeback against Maryland, college basketball fans have been itching for an extended Iowa State tournament run.
Crooks always delivers on the biggest stages. But time and again, the Cyclones aren’t long for them.
A familiar script played out for No. 8 Iowa State in the first round against No. 9 Syracuse, as the Orange upset the Cyclones despite 37 points on 17 of 25 shooting from the All-American Crooks. When Crooks was on the court, Iowa State was a plus-one, but it lost the nine minutes she sat by ten points.
It was a somewhat surprising result for the Cyclones, who were at full strength while Syracuse was missing starting point guard Dominique Darius, who injured her hand during the ACC tournament. But the Orange got a classic March Madness heater from bench guard Olivia Schmitt to make up for Darius’ absence; the sophomore had made 10 3-pointers in 26 games heading into the NCAA Tournament but exploded for five in the second quarter. That flurry allowed Syracuse to turn a three-point deficit into a 15-point halftime lead, an advantage it would never relinquish.
🔥 SHE’S ON FIRE 🔥
Olivia Schmitt has started the game a perfect 5-of-5 from long range!
📺 ESPN2 x @CuseWBB pic.twitter.com/OK7jJhquFC
— ACC Women’s Basketball (@accwbb) March 21, 2026
Crooks could only hope for such support from her teammates. Four Orange players scored in double figures, compared to two for Iowa State. Beyond Crooks, the Cyclones shot 9 of 42 from the field. Syracuse mostly elected to defend Crooks with single coverage, so Iowa State couldn’t even find openings from beyond the arc, shooting 3 of 22 on 3-pointers. Sharpshooter Kenzie Hare, who made 41.9 percent of her 3-pointers before Saturday, went 0 of 6 from distance, including a miss that would have cut the lead to one possession in the final minute.
Now, the nation’s second-leading scorer will be watching the second round from home yet again. The Cyclones went winless in the postseason for the first time in Crooks’ tenure, failing to even win a Big 12 tournament game, a concerning downward trend as the star enters her final collegiate season.
Meanwhile, the Orange will face UConn in the second round for the second time in three years. Two seasons ago, Dyaisha Fair climbed up to third on college basketball’s all-time scoring list as Syracuse lost by a respectable margin of eight. This year’s Huskies are a different breed, however, and the Orange will need another out-of-body scoring experience from Schmitt and probably some others. – Sabreena Merchant
No. 6 Notre Dame 79, No. 11 Fairfield 60
Up next: No. 3 Ohio State
One of the most highly-anticipated second-round matchups is officially set, as No. 3 seed Ohio State and No. 6 seed Notre Dame will meet in Monday’s second round in Columbus. It will pit two of the nation’s most elite point guards, Ohio State’s Jaloni Cambridge and Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo, against each other.
Hidalgo, the ACC Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year, put on a clinic in the Irish’s 79-60 victory over Fairfield with an NCAA Tournament program-record eight steals. That feat came on top of 23 points, nine rebounds and six assists. She entered the tournament ranked second nationally with 807 points this season.
and we add another and @HannahHidalgo now has EIGHT https://t.co/WGpasD2aXm
— Notre Dame Women’s Basketball (@ndwbb) March 21, 2026
Meanwhile, Cambridge, a sophomore, ranked seventh nationally with 751 points this season. She reached the 1,000-point career mark this year in just 54 games, one of the fastest paces in program history. Cambridge had 21 points, two steals and two blocks in the Buckeyes’ first-round win Saturday morning over Howard.
Both reached All-America stature, though, because they are more than just scorers.
Cambridge’s speed is a difference-maker for Ohio State’s high-tempo offense and full-court press defense. She leads the Buckeyes in assists and ranks third as a rebounder, averaging 5.2 per game, the most among Ohio State guards.
Hidalgo exceeds any limits on the court. She leads the country with 173 steals and ranks second on the team in rebounding, as well.
The two aren’t strangers, either, playing with and against each other in the Team USA system.
“Another phenomenal guard like Jaloni, and to be able to go head-to-head with her, it’s going to be a fun game,” Hidalgo said. “Two quick guards too, she’s extremely fast, she ran track, so the foot speed is going to be crazy.”
This is the type of matchup the NCAA Tournament is known for, but it doesn’t often come this early in the tournament. It’s something, though, that Notre Dame coach Niele Ivey said is good for the sport. “It’s great to grow the game,” Notre Dame coach Niele Ivey said. “People want to watch women’s basketball, they want to see the great products on the floor. I think we have two of the best players on the floor.”
But Cambridge versus Hidalgo isn’t the only familiar matchup. Ohio State coach Kevin McGuff and Ivey have been linked together for years
McGuff, who spent time as an assistant at Notre Dame from 1996-2002, coached Ivey in her time playing for the Irish. Ivey called McGuff a mentor, but their lives have stretched beyond basketball. Ivey is the godmother to one of McGuff’s six children and is best friends with his wife Letitia. “He’s family,” Ivey said. “He’s somebody that I love, I love their whole family.”
That will bring a familiarity to Monday’s matchup, amplifying the intensity on the floor.
Notre Dame and Ohio State want to dictate the pace of play with their defense. Ohio State is 17th nationally with 706 turnovers forced, Notre Dame is 36th and forced Fairfield into 19 turnovers.
“I knew it was going to be an incredible game,” Ivey said. “Two dynamic guards and again a system that I’m familiar with.” — Cameron Teague Robinson
No. 10 Virginia 82, No. 7 Georgia 73 (OT)
Up next in Round 2: No. 2 Iowa
It took 20 games, but the 2026 NCAA Tournament finally produced its first upset: No. 10 Virginia took down No. 7 Georgia to keep one double-digit seed alive. It took a seven-point comeback in the fourth quarter, a midrange jumper that was just short at the regulation buzzer and an entire extra session for the Cavaliers to pull away and advance to the second round for the first time since 2018.
Virginia is the second First Four team to win a game in the Round of 64, joining No. 11 Mississippi State in 2023, but the Cavaliers were also the highest-seeded First Four team in the 68-team era, earning a slightly easier first-round matchup.
No Virginia player had ever suited up in the NCAA Tournament in a Cavaliers uniform, but they had plenty of experience at previous stops. LSU transfer Sa’Myah Smith won a national championship as a freshman and was a starter on an Elite Eight team last season (she missed the 2024 tournament with a knee injury). She was a steadying force for Virginia with 22 points on 10-of-12 shooting, 11 rebounds and three assists. Smith had five points in the overtime as the Cavaliers pulled away.
Tabitha Amanze, who has played in the tournament twice for Princeton, and Romi Levy, who made her NCAA Tournament debut in 2025 for South Florida, had important defensive efforts for Virginia on Mia Woolfolk and Riley Theuerkauf. Levy also hit the game-tying 3 in regulation on an absurd banker.
That veteran presence should help the Cavaliers in the second round, likely a road game against No. 2 seed Iowa. Smith is no stranger to facing the Hawkeyes, and a familiar foe from 2023, Hannah Stuelke, awaits.
But the leader for Virginia was the homegrown Kymora Johnson, who has dazzled in her first March Madness. Johnson had the game-winning 3-pointer in the First Four against Arizona State to top off a 17-point, 10-rebound, five-assist night. The junior followed that up with 28 points, seven rebounds and six assists against the Bulldogs with only one turnover. It has been a star turn for the Charlottesville, Va., native who hasn’t had the opportunity to play on national television much but has certainly made some new fans over the last three days.
The Cavaliers had outscored the Bulldogs 13-6 over the final seven minutes of regulation, then finished the game on a 7-0 run.
Record-breaking temperatures soared to 88 degrees in Iowa City, which brought a little extra warmth to Carver-Hawkeye Arena. The building does not have air conditioning and was built 43 years ago inside a local crater. Courtside temperature approached the mid-70s at game’s end.
It’s been one of the wildest weather weeks in the region. On Selection Sunday, a blizzard gripped Eastern Iowa, sending temperatures to near zero with extra wind and several inches of snow. Virginia plays either second-seeded Iowa or 15th seed Fairleigh Dickinson on Monday, which has an expected high temperature of 53 degrees. – Sabreena Merchant and Scott Dochterman
No. 5 Kentucky 71, No. 12 James Madison 56
No. 4 West Virginia 82, No. 13 Miami (Ohio) 54
Up next in Round 2: No. 4 West Virginia vs. No. 5 Kentucky
For five years, first at Virginia Tech and then at Kentucky, coach Kenny Brooks had press-break cheat code Georgia Amoore on his side. The 5-foot-6 Aussie could handle just about anything a defense could throw at the Hokies and Wildcats, but she never had to face “Stress Virginia.”
So, if Brooks is feeling a bit of stress at the thought of facing West Virginia on Sunday with a Sweet 16 berth on the line? It’s understandable.
Mark Kellogg’s Mountaineers use full-court pressure more than almost anyone in the country, and it’s uber effective. They turn over opponents on one-third of the possessions when they run their press, and they’re among the top 15 teams nationally in turning over opponents (nearly 22 per game). In their opening round game against Miami (Ohio), the Mountaineers tallied 11 steals and 15 forced turnovers (and 21 points off those giveaways).
Kentucky has already struggled this season against high-pressure defensive teams in the SEC like Texas and South Carolina, going 0-3 against them this season. In the Wildcats’ sole meeting against the Longhorns, they tallied 23 turnovers, and Texas snagged 11 steals. In two games against South Carolina, Kentucky averaged 15 turnovers a game, and the Gamecocks averaged eight steals.
West Virginia senior Jordan Harrison is the engine of the Mountaineers’ defense. She’s in her fourth year in Kellogg’s system (she transferred from Stephen F. Austin when Kellogg, the former SFA coach, got the West Virginia job in 2023) and she averages 3.2 steals per game, good enough for the 12th-most nationally.
To beat West Virginia on its home court, Wildcats point guard Tonie Morgan needs to be at her best. The Georgia Tech transfer has handled her transition to the SEC quite well, averaging a career-best 8.2 assists per game, but down the stretch, her turnovers have ticked up, averaging 4.4 turnovers over the last 10 games. According to Synergy, Morgan has turned over the ball 27 percent of the time she faces a press. – Chantel Jennings
No. 3 Louisville 72, No. 14 Vermont 52
No. 6 Alabama 68, No. 11 Rhode Island 55
Up next in Round 2: Louisville vs. Alabama
Louisville and Alabama haven’t seen each other since 2023 in the regular season, but the teams will meet Monday in Louisville with a trip to the Sweet 16 on the line.
Behind Mackenly Randolph’s 20 points, the third-seeded Cardinals cruised past No. 14 seed Vermont 72-52 just before No. 6 seed Alabama took care of business 68-55 against No. 11 Rhode Island.
The stakes are high for the Cardinals and Crimson Tide … for two completely different reasons.
Jeff Walz has led the Cardinals to the Sweet 16 a dozen times since taking over the program before the 2007-08 season. The Cardinals have been a staple in the NCAA Tournament with eight trips to the Elite Eight, four Final Four berths and two national title game appearances. Alabama, meanwhile, is looking to make its first trip to the Sweet 16 since 1998.
Playing without guard Skylar Jones for the first time this season (Walz announced she is no longer with the program Friday), the Cardinals still looked the part against Vermont on Randolph’s big day, with Laura Ziegler and Tajianna Roberts adding 12 points, and Imari Berry chipped in 10. The Cardinals challenged the Catamounts both inside and out, shooting 42 percent from 3 and finishing with 38 points in the paint.
Jessica Timmons’ 21 points led the way for Alabama on a day when Essence Cody also scored 19 and Diana Collins added 16.
Priority No. 1 on Alabama’s scouting report? Find a way to contain Randolph, who in addition to taking it to Vermont in the paint, finished 2-of-3 from beyond the arc.
“I think with Mack right now, it’s her consistency and ability to shoot the ball from the outside,” Walz said. “She’s extremely strong in the post. She does a great job of finishing on post-ups, but at the beginning of the year she wasn’t shooting the ball with as much confidence.” — Grace Raynor
Zoe Brooks’ availability uncertain
NC State coach Wes Moore said it was “hard to say at this point” whether junior Zoe Brooks will be available for the seventh-seeded Wolfpack’s second-round game against second-seeded Michigan on Sunday. The guard injured her foot midway through the third quarter in a first-round win over Tennessee on Friday evening and didn’t return to the game.
“Some of it may come down to just how she feels tomorrow,” Moore said on Saturday. “She won’t be practicing today. Taking all precautions with a boot, crutches, trying to keep weight off it.”
Brooks is the Wolfpacks’ second-leading scorer, and their leader in assists, steals free throws. The junior has started 72 games during her career and has the highest usage of any NC State player this season.
If Brooks is unable to go, Moore will likely turn to freshman Destiny “Ky’She” Lunan as a ballhandler. Moore called on her after Brooks’ injury against Tennessee, and she played 23 minutes, the fourth-most of her career. Lunan has appeared in 30 games this season, averaging 4.5 points and 1.2 assists per game in 17 minutes of play.
“I’ve got a lot of confidence in her, and I think the other players do as well,” Moore said of Lunan. “Still not the same as having Zoe out there, a junior with her experience and all that she’s done, but either way we’ll be ready to play.”
With the hit to its backcourt, NC State would likely try emphasizing the paint more, highlighting senior Khamil Pierre and exposing a potential mismatch against Michigan forward Sofilkanich. Pierre, a Vanderbilt transfer, has led the Wolfpack in scoring and rebounding this season, averaging a 17-point, 12-rebound double-double.
Especially with a homecourt advantage, the Wolverines already had the edge going into Sunday but given Michigan’s talent and depth across its backcourt — Olivia Olson, Syla Swords, Mila Holloway and Brooke Quarles Daniels — replacing a veteran like Brooks with any freshman dampens the Wolfpacks’ chances at an upset. — Chantel Jennings
Day 1 highlights
You can read our first-day takeaways here. The most noteworthy events of the day included:
• Tennessee’s futile effort to extend its season, leaving the tournament on an eight-game losing streak of historic proportions.
• Minnesota’s 30-9 fourth quarter comeback at The Barn.
• Skylar Jones’ departure from Louisville.
• Duke withstanding a 36-point scoring barrage from Charleston’s Taryn Barbot.
How to watch
Here’s Saturday’s guide for watching the rest of the first-round games.