The Women’s Bracket Starts Here: Can Anyone Touch UConn?
Before the Women's March Madness Tournament even tips off, the message is already loud and clear — and it’s coming from the one place that doesn’t deal in hype. Vegas.
UConn opened as a -270 favorite to win the national title. That’s not just big. That’s absurd. To put it in perspective, the most hyped men’s team of the last 25 years — the 2015 Kentucky team that entered March at 38-0 — was only +110. They were still plus money.
And that’s what makes this so telling. The women’s bracket hasn’t even started, and the market is already leaning heavily in one direction. This isn’t narrative. It’s not media buzz. It’s the books saying: there’s one team, and then there’s everyone else.
So the real question isn’t just how UConn got here — it’s whether anyone in this field can make things even remotely uncomfortable for them once the games actually start.
This Isn’t Just Dominance — It’s Separation
The Huskies are 34-0. And yeah, that’s impressive on its own — but it’s how they’ve done it that makes you stop for a second.
They lost Paige Bueckers after the 2025 title run, which normally is the kind of thing that forces a reset. Instead, they somehow came back better. Not slightly better — noticeably better. They’re beating teams by 38.4 points per game, which is the third-largest margin in Division I history… and the only teams ahead of them are also UConn teams. That tells you everything you need to know about the level we’re talking about here.
They haven’t trailed after halftime once all season. Not once. The closest anyone’s come to really pushing them was Michigan back in November, a 72-69 game. Since then, it’s been a steady stream of games that're over by the third quarter. At a certain point, they stop feeling like wins and start feeling like statements.
Why This Team Feels Different
A lot of that starts with Sarah Strong, who doesn’t really play like a typical college star. She’s doing everything — 18.5 points, 7.6 boards, 4.1 assists, 3.4 steals — on ridiculous efficiency. And it’s not empty production. She’ll grab a rebound, push the break, create a look, and then rotate back on defense to guard the other team’s best player. Sometimes all in the same stretch. You don’t really see that at this level.
Then there’s Azzi Fudd, who finally looks like the version people have been waiting on. Career-high scoring, over 45 percent from three, and just complete control offensively. When she gets rolling, it feels like every possession is either a clean look or a breakdown waiting to happen.
But the part that really separates this group is that it doesn’t drop off after those two. KK Arnold, Ashlynn Shade, Serah Williams — they’ve all been steady. Blanca Quiñonez comes off the bench and still impacts games. This isn’t a top-heavy roster where you survive minutes. It’s a rotation that keeps the pressure on.
And then you look at the numbers as a whole, and it almost doesn’t make sense. Best three-point shooting team in the country at nearly 40 percent. Scoring close to 90 a game. At the same time, they’re also the best defensive team in the country, holding teams to just over 50 points. Usually you get one or the other. UConn has both.
That’s why it’s so hard to picture what a loss would even look like.
Who Can Actually Make This Interesting
UCLA
The Bruins are the most legitimate threat in the field — and it’s not just a trendy pick. They’re 32-1, ran through the Big Ten without a loss, and then backed it up with a conference tournament title. And this isn’t a young team figuring it out on the fly. It’s a veteran group that’s been through big games, big moments, and everything that comes with March.
All five starters are seniors. All five have scored 1,000 career points. That matters more than people think this time of year. There’s just less panic in those groups. Gianna Kneepkens and Charlisse Leger-Walker both being over 2,000 points isn’t just a fun stat — it tells you they’ve each been the go-to option before.
And then there’s Lauren Betts, who is really the whole reason this conversation even exists. She’s not just productive — she changes the way you have to play. 16.4 points, 8.6 rebounds, nearly 66 percent shooting, and back-to-back Defensive Player of the Year awards. At 6-foot-7, she’s a problem on every possession. You can’t guard her one-on-one consistently, and if you send help, she’s good enough to make the right read.
We’ve already seen a glimpse of it, too. In last year’s Final Four, when UConn rolled UCLA, Betts was the one player who didn’t look overwhelmed. She put up 26 on 11-of-18 shooting. It didn’t matter in that game, but it does matter now. It showed that she has no problem getting hers against this team.
The real swing piece is Kiki Rice. Because Betts is going to get touches. She’s going to produce. But if Rice is hitting shots and controlling the game — 15.2 a night, 51% from the field, 38% from three — that’s when UCLA starts to feel like too much to handle.
The only catch is the path. UCLA isn’t in UConn’s region, which means they’ve got their own fight just to get there. A potential Elite Eight matchup with Texas is no joke, especially with how physical Texas plays. That game alone could feel like a Final Four.
But if UCLA does get through, and they end up across from UConn in Phoenix, you’re looking at the one matchup in this entire tournament that feels like it could actually live up to the hype. Not just competitive — but a game where both teams have to be great for 40 minutes.
South Carolina
Dawn Staley’s Gamecocks went 31-3, and even with the SEC title game loss to Texas, they still feel like… South Carolina. That sounds simple, but it matters. This is their 14th straight tournament, and they’re chasing a fifth straight Final Four. At this point, getting there isn’t a breakthrough — it’s the baseline.
And the way they’re built hasn’t really changed. It’s still physical, still disciplined, still one of the toughest teams in the country to score on. They’re not going to beat themselves, and they’re not going to suddenly play faster just because you want them to.
Joyce Edwards is the headliner offensively at 19.6 a night, and she’s the kind of player who can carry a stretch when things get stagnant. Madina Okot gives them real presence inside — 10.9 boards a game and the kind of size that makes you think twice before attacking the rim. And Raven Johnson just kind of runs everything. SEC Defensive Player of the Year, one of the best point guards in the country, and the type of player you feel every possession, even if she’s not lighting up the box score.
That’s really the thing with South Carolina. It’s not just talent — it’s the system. Dawn Staley has built something sustainable. They consistently play their best basketball when it matters most. At this point, that’s a track record you trust.
But when you bring it back to UConn, the question gets pretty simple. What does this matchup actually look like? And we’ve already seen it.
Last year, UConn ended their season. And the issue then is the same one now — they don’t really have an answer for Sarah Strong. To be fair, nobody does. But South Carolina is one of the few teams you can point to and say they’ve tried different looks, different matchups, different approaches… and it still didn’t work.
Texas
The Longhorns won the SEC Tournament by beating South Carolina on their way to a No. 1 seed, and they’ll get the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight in Fort Worth — which is about as close to a home setup as you can ask for in March.
Madison Booker is the engine. She’s the most explosive guard in the SEC, not named Raven Johnson, and when she’s on, she can take over stretches. Not just scoring, but dictating pace — getting into the lane, forcing help, making you defend longer than you want to. And that fits perfectly with how Vic Schaefer wants this team to play.
Truthfully, this is probably the most physical team in the field. They don’t mind slowing things down, they don’t mind making every possession feel like work, and they’re comfortable turning games into a grind. And that’s really where the intrigue comes in with UConn. If there’s a version of a game where the Huskies don’t just run away from you early, it’s this kind of environment — fewer possessions, more contact, and less rhythm offensively.
It doesn’t guarantee anything, but it at least gives you a path that feels different from everyone else’s.
The concern, though, is pretty clear. Booker has had issues staying on the floor in some big games because of foul trouble, and when she’s not out there, the offense just isn’t the same. And then there’s the shooting. In the SEC title game loss, they went 3-of-12 from three. That’s not going to cut it against UConn.
Because against this version of the Huskies, you don’t just need to defend and slow the game down — you still have to score enough to keep up. And if you’re not hitting shots, especially from the perimeter, there’s just no realistic path.
Vanderbilt
This is probably the most fun storyline in the entire bracket — and the one that feels the most “March Madness.” Vanderbilt drew the No. 2 seed in UConn’s region, which sets up a potential Elite Eight matchup between Geno Auriemma and Shea Ralph — his longtime former assistant — with a Final Four spot on the line. That alone is enough to grab your attention.
Then you add Mikayla Blakes into it, and it goes from interesting to legitimately dangerous. She’s the leading scorer in the country at 27.1 a game, and it doesn’t feel fluky when you watch her. She can get buckets in a hurry, from anywhere, and she’s had 30+ in 12 different games this season. That’s not just volume — that’s takeover ability. And if there’s one way to actually make UConn uncomfortable, it’s having a player who can go on a heater and bend a game by herself.
Against a team like that, you need someone who can keep pace when they start rolling offensively, someone who doesn’t get sped up or rattled when the game starts tilting. Blakes is one of the very few players in this field who fits that description.
The issue is everything around her.
Vanderbilt just doesn’t have the same level of consistency across the roster. The SEC Tournament loss to Ole Miss in the quarterfinals knocked them out of that No. 1 seed conversation, and it exposed some of the concerns that have been there all year. The defense isn’t overwhelming. They can be scored on. And if Blakes has an off stretch — or even just a normal night instead of a huge one — it gets a lot harder for them to keep up.
The Bottom Line
The sportsbooks have this one nailed. This version of UConn isn’t just good — it’s operating on the same level as those mid-2010s UConn teams that made everything feel inevitable. So what does it actually take to beat them? You need UConn to be a little off — maybe shots aren’t falling, maybe Strong or Fudd gets into foul trouble — and at the same time, you need to be nearly perfect. Hitting shots, taking care of the ball, capitalizing on every small window. And even then, you probably need a little bit of chaos mixed in.
And that’s where the -270 number really comes into focus. It’s not hype — it’s probability. To beat this UConn team, you’re asking for one of those “everything went right” games against a team that hasn’t even trailed after halftime in 34 games. That’s a crazy standard to clear.
It’s not impossible. UConn has been knocked off in this exact spot before — 2017, 2018 — and both times it came down to one night where things didn’t quite click and the other team was ready for it.
But if you’re being honest about what you’ve watched all season, it doesn’t feel likely.
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