The Stanford women got contributions from every starter as they fought off Arizona for their first national title since 1992.
Author: Lindsay Schnell, USA TODAY
Analysis: Stanford’s depth, grit are too much for Arizona as Cardinal win first womens’ title since 1992
The Stanford women got contributions from every starter as they fought off Arizona for their first national title since 1992.
Analysis: Final Four matchup between Stanford, South Carolina shining example of best of women’s sports
We love sports because they mimic life: There’s unprecedented joy and agonizing heartbreak. Friday’s semifinal gave us that in a nail-biter finish.
Stanford turns back Louisville 78-63, advances to 14th women’s Final Four
Ashten Prechtel came off the Stanford bench to score 15 points, including 3-of-3 from deep, to lift the Cardinal to its first Final Four since 2017.
Stanford’s Anna Wilson finds joy, purpose in defense. We should celebrate her for it.
Anna Wilson has blossomed into one of the nation’s best defenders after years of injuries, frustration. Now, she wants to lead Stanford to a title.
Is basketball necessary? For Maryland women’s coach Brenda Frese and her family, there’s no doubt
Brenda Frese is trying to lead the Terrapins to another national title under watchful eye of her greatest fan, her father, who has prostate cancer.
Joyful play from Stanford’s Kiana Williams could help Cardinal win women’s hoops title
Kiana Williams, one of the top guards in the country, credits her father, brothers for toughening her up as a young kid playing hoops.
Opinion: Big Ten men bust your bracket? Time to switch your viewing to the Big Ten women
The Big Ten men busted many brackets. Want to still watch excellent basketball? Watch the Big Ten women play.
Opinion: Women’s NCAA Tournament promises surprises, exciting runs from deep field
Parity has been growing at an exponential rate in the women’s game. UConn, the most dominant program in the modern era, hasn’t won a title since 2016.
Going to college over Zoom is exhausting. It’s worse in a 16-hour time difference: ‘I feel like a vampire’
Stuck overseas, thousands of students are taking classes into the wee hours of the night, desperate to keep up with their classmates.