In a tournament marked by an absence of upsets, the four No. 1 seeds have not just advanced but dominated, combining for six of the ten 40-point victories and setting a new standard for March Madness supremacy that reshapes the championship landscape.
As of Tuesday, only one perfect bracket remains on ESPN, a stark indicator of how the favorites have precisely marched through the 2026 Women’s NCAA Tournament. All four No. 1 seeds—UConn, UCLA, Texas, and South Carolina—have advanced to the Sweet 16 with flawless 2-0 records, and they’ve done so with a level of margin that is rewriting the tournament record books.
According to USA TODAY Sports’ ongoing coverage, these top teams have combined for six of the ten games decided by 40 or more points, the most in a single tournament’s history. This chalk-heavy outcome highlights a women’s game where the gap between the elite and the rest has rarely been wider, contrasting with the chaos often seen in the men’s bracket.
The dominance extends beyond just the top line. No. 2 seeds have gone a combined 14-2, with only No. 2 Iowa and No. 3 Ohio State falling in the second round to No. 10 Virginia and No. 6 Notre Dame, respectively. Virginia’s run is historic: the first First Four team ever to reach the Sweet 16 and the lone double-digit seed remaining, a Cinderella story in an otherwise predictable tournament.
UConn: The Legacy Machine Keeps Rolling
Entering the tournament, questions lingered about whether UConn deserved the No. 1 overall seed over UCLA, with the Selection Committee citing the Huskies’ “observable component”—the way they won throughout the season. Those doubts have been emphatically silenced. UConn has defeated its opponents by an average of 36 points, extending its win streak to 52 games and punching its ticket to the Sweet 16 for the 32nd consecutive time, a staggering record of consistency.
While star guard Azzi Fudd had a quiet first game with nine points against No. 16 UTSA, she responded with a career-high 34 points and eight 3-pointers in the second-round dismantling of No. 9 Syracuse. Meanwhile, national player of the year candidate Sarah Strong is averaging 18 points and seven rebounds in the tournament, showcasing why UConn has held the top spot in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll all season. The Huskies’ path has been a masterclass in controlled aggression, setting up a Sweet 16 showdown with No. 4 North Carolina.
UCLA: Betts’ Breakout Leads Bruins’ Charge
UCLA has been equally imposing, with center Lauren Betts delivering a career-high 35 points, along with nine rebounds and five assists, in the second-round victory over No. 8 Oklahoma State. The Bruins opened the tournament with a 53-point win over No. 16 Cal Baptist, the largest postseason victory in program history, and have seen four players reach double-digits in scoring across their two games. Gianna Kneepkens has been a steady threat from beyond the arc, shooting 3-of-6 from 3-point range against Oklahoma State.
UCLA’s quest to return to the Elite Eight for the second straight season continues against No. 4 Minnesota, but the narrative is clear: the Bruins are peaking at the right time, with Betts’ emergence as a primary scorer adding a new dimension to their attack. This run solidifies UCLA’s return to the pinnacle of women’s basketball after years of building.
Texas: Booker’s Quest for Redemption
Texas guard Madison Booker arrived in March Madness with unfinished business, having reached the Elite Eight and Final Four in her first two seasons. “I feel like we can get farther. I feel like we can win a championship. That’s how the mentality is on this team,” Booker conveyed, her actions speaking louder in a career-high 40-point performance against No. 8 Oregon, complemented by eight rebounds, five assists, and zero turnovers.
Alongside Rori Harmon, who contributed nine points, five steals, and six rebounds in that game, Booker forms a dynamic duo that has led Texas to a 79-7 record in games where both play. The Longhorns now face No. 5 Kentucky in the Sweet 16, with eyes on a deeper run that could culminate in their first title since 1986, fueled by a senior class seeking legacy-defining moments.
South Carolina: Edwards’ Emergence and a Rematch Looms
South Carolina has been the highest-scoring of the top seeds, surpassing 100 points in both tournament games. Sophomore forward Joyce Edwards has been the catalyst, averaging a near double-double with 25 points and nine rebounds per game. In the win over No. 9 USC, six Gamecocks reached double-digits, including a 15-point, 15-rebound double-double from Madina Okot.
However, the Sweet 16 brings a formidable challenge: No. 4 Oklahoma, the only team to beat South Carolina twice this season? Actually, the Sooners handed South Carolina its second loss of the regular season. Oklahoma freshman Aaliyah Chavez scored 15 of her 26 points in overtime in January, marking the Sooners’ third-ever win against an AP top 2 opponent. Slowing Chavez will be paramount for South Carolina’s championship aspirations, turning this Sweet 16 matchup into a potential classic rematch.
The Bigger Picture: Why This Matters
This tournament’s lack of upsets is not an accident; it reflects a season where the elite teams have built insurmountable leads through player development, coaching, and resources. The women’s game is seeing a stratification where programs like UConn, South Carolina, and others have created a tier above the rest. For fans, this means a potential for historic Final Four matchups—think a UConn vs. UCLA collision—but also concerns about competitive balance in future seasons.
The lone double-digit seed remaining, No. 10 Virginia—the first First Four team ever to reach the Sweet 16—serves as a reminder that magic still happens, but it’s the exception that proves the rule. As the Sweet 16 approaches, the question isn’t if the No. 1 seeds will advance, but how much they’ll dominate next. The 2026 Women’s NCAA Tournament may be remembered not for Cinderella stories, but for the relentless, almost mechanical superiority of its top teams.
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