Before the 2022-23 women's college basketball season tips off on Nov. 7, we're breaking down the race and ranking teams and players across the country.
And we're tackling the biggest questions: Can the South Carolina Gamecocks win a second consecutive national championship? Will Gamecocks senior Aliyah Boston repeat as national player of the year? Which teams will be No. 1 seeds come March? What is the most compelling conference race? Who are the best players in the nation?
The answers will continue to unfold right through the women's Final Four at American Airlines Arena in Dallas on March 31 and April 2.
National coverage
The six freshmen who will make an immediate impact in 2022-23
One can't miss, one scores at will: Iowa's Clark, Czinano form duo college hoops has never seen
Winners and losers: Which teams have the toughest nonconference schedules?
These 10 breakout players will determine how far their teams go in March
Way-Too-Early Top 25 rankings: Texas up, UConn down and South Carolina still on top
Women's Bracketology: South Carolina, Stanford, Texas and Tennessee are 1-seeds