Much-anticipated season finally starts for talented UNC women

By R.L. Bynum

The most anticipated UNC women’s basketball season in years is finally about to start.

With six former five-star recruits and five former four-star recruits on a roster that includes a mix of youth and experience, Coach Courtney Banghart has laid out plenty of challenges in non-conference play.

Before Carolina gets into the tough part of that schedule, the Tar Heels will be heavy favorites in four non-conference home games — including three opponents with Massey Ratings ranks below 200 — to start the season, beginning with a 7 p.m. Wednesday matchup against Gardner-Webb (ESPN3).

It would have been a tough matchup last season, but the reigning Big South Conference champions are picked to finish last after losing all five starters and their head coach. The Bulldogs welcome nine newcomers.

The big early tests for No. 16 UNC, which rolled over Charlotte in one closed scrimmage and lost narrowly in another in Dallas against No. 4 UCLA, start later this month at the Gulf Coast Showcase, where they could meet No. 3 Iowa. After that, there are December matchups with No. 6 South Carolina and No. 2 Connecticut.

Even with the loss of two freshmen redshirting after summer surgeries — five star stretch-four Ciera Toomey (torn right meniscus) and Laila Hull (torn right labrum), last season’s Indiana Player of the Year — Banghart has a deep, talented roster that gives her many options.

“I love our roster,” Banghart said as she heads into her fifth season in Chapel Hill after the Tar Heels went 22–11 last season. “We’re the most competitive team I’ve had since I’ve been at Carolina. We’re the deepest team I’ve had since I’ve been at Carolina. We hope we’ll be the most well-led since I’ve been at Carolina. We’ve got a lot of good leadership qualities [and the players] have really grown in that role.”

The leadership starts with co-captains Deja Kelly and Alyssa Ustby, two of five seniors on the team. That group includes returning starter Anya Poole, Alexandra Zelaya and Iowa State transfer Lexi Donarski.


Subscribe for a cleaner, smoother reading experience without the flashing banners, slow-loading elements, or those especially annoying pop‑up ads that interrupt the flow of the story. You’ll also get the first version of each story emailed to you. The only ads you’ll see are static, non-intrusive ads for UNC‑related books, and there are none currently on the site.


“I feel like my role is really whatever the team calls for, and so whatever Coach Banghart asks me to do, what’s needed from my teammates, whether it’s specifically for that game or that season,” Ustby said. “Stepping into the roles of just being a competitive worker and inspiring my teammates to do the same, because that’s just something that’s really important to us, and we have a collective understanding that if we all come together, we compete well together, then we’ll go far.”

Kelly says the eight newcomers give the team a good chance to build on what it accomplished last season.

“I think everyone brings their own competitive nature, which I think is huge to have on a really good team,” Kelly said. “We all are like-minded and have the same goals. So I think being able to hold each other accountable in those ways and helping each other reach those goals, as well, I think will be huge.”

Gardner-Webb went 29–5 last season and won the Big South regular-season (18–0) and tournament titles before losing to Utah in the first round of the NCAA tournament last season.

But the Bulldogs enter this season No. 211 in the Massey Rating. They lost Big South Player of the Year Jhessyka Williams to graduation, and fellow All-Big South first-team selections Lauren Bevis and Alasia Smith transferred.

Head coach Alex Simmons left in the offseason for Memphis, and took Smith and fellow starters Layken Cox and Ari Cain with her. Bevis transferred to High Point.

G-W’s first-year head coach is Scott Merritt, who had been the associate head coach since 2021 at Wisconsin.

Senior 5–11 guard Micahla Funderburk is the top returning scorer from last season at 3.9 points per game after starting only five games last season.

The Bulldogs have five freshmen and four transfers: Point guard Nyla Walker from USC Upstate, junior guard Ashley Hawkins from Cypress College, graduate student forward Ramatoulaye Keïta from Buffalo and sophomore forward Trinity Moreland from UMKC.

Carolina has won three of the previous four meetings (81–65 Dec. 13, 2009; 109–44 Nov. 12, 2011; and 83–62 at G-W on Dec. 31, 2019). Gardner-Webb won 66–65 in the opener of the 2015–16 season.


DateDay/monthScoresOpponent/event
(current ranks)
Record
October
30ThursdayL, 91–82No. 4 South Carolina
in Atlanta
Exhib.
November
3MondayW, 90–42vs. N.C. Central1–0
6ThursdayW, 71–37vs. Elon2–0
WBCA Challenge
Las Vegas
13ThursdayL, 78–60vs. No. 2 UCLA2–1
15SaturdayW, 82–68vs. Fairfield3–1
———————————
20ThursdayW, 85–50at N.C. A&T4–1
23SundayW, 94–48vs. UNCG5–1
Cancun Challenge
Cancun, Mexico
27ThursdayW, 83–48vs. South Dakota St.6–1
28FridayW, 85–73vs. Kansas State7–1
29SaturdayW, 80–63vs. Columbia8–1
DecemberACC/SEC
Women’s Challenge
4ThursdayW, 79–64at No. 3 Texas8–2
———————————
7SundayW, 82–40vs. Boston Univ.9–2
14SundayL, 76–66, OTvs. No. 13 Louisville9–3,
0–1 ACC
17WednesdayW, 84–34vs. UNCW10–3
21SundayW, 93–74vs. Charleston Southern11–3
29MondayW, 90–38at Boston College12–3,
1–1 ACC
January
1ThursdayW, 71–55vs. California13–3, 2–1
4SundayL, 77–71, OTvs. Stanford13–4, 2–2
11SundayL, 73–50at No. 22 Notre Dame13–5, 2–3
15ThursdayW, 73–62vs. Miami14–5, 3–3
18SundayW, 82–55at Florida State15–5, 4–3
22ThursdayW, 54–46at Georgia Tech16–5, 5–3
25SundayW, 77–71, OTvs. Syracuse17–5, 6–3
February
2MondayW, 61–59at N.C. State18–5, 7–3
5ThursdayW, 53–44vs. Clemson19–5, 8–3
8SundayW, 84–56vs. Wake Forest20–5, 9–3
12ThursdayW, 94–42vs. SMU21–5, 10–3
15SundayL, 72–68at No. 8 Duke21–6, 10–4
19ThursdayW, 66–63, OTat Virginia Tech22–6, 11–4
22SundayW, 78–50vs. Pittsburgh23–6, 12–4
26ThursdayW, 82–70at Virginia24–6, 13–4
March
1SundayW, 72–69vs. No. 8 Duke25–6, 14–4
ACC
tournament
Gas South Arena,
Duluth, Ga.
6FridayW, 85–68Quarterfinal vs. Va. Tech26–6
7SaturdayL, 65–57Semifinal vs.
No. 13 Louisville
26–7
NCAA tournament
Fort Worth 1 Regional
21FridayW, 82–51First round in Chapel Hill:
vs. Western Illinois
27–7
23SundayW, 74–66Second round in Chapel Hill:
No. 17 Maryland
28–7
27FridayL, 63–52Sweet 16 in Fort Worth, Texas:
vs. No. 1 UConn
28–8


(UNC is one below the 15-player limit)

YearNo.PlayersPos.Height
Freshman11Kate HarpringPG5–10
Freshman52Noelle BofiaF6–4
Sophomore3Gabby White — WG5–10
Sophomore7Nyla BrooksW6–1
Sophomore26Taissa QueirozG6–1
Junior34Blanca Thomas C6–5
Junior1Jordan Zubich G5–11
RS junior21Ciera ToomeyF6–4
RS junior4Laila Hull W6–1
Senior5Sophie Burrows — XG6–2
Senior8Achol Akot — YF6–1
Senior10Reniya KellyG5–7
Senior15Sydney BarkerG5–6
Graduate13Chloe Clardy — ZG5–9

W — Virginia transfer; X — Syracuse transfer; Y — Oklahoma State transfer; Z — Stanford transfer

Former players who entered transfer portal

PlayerClass next seasonPos.HgtNext school
Elina AarnisaloJuniorG5–10UCLA
Lanie GrantJuniorG5–9TCU
Taliyah HendersonSophomoreW6–1Clemson
Liza AstakhovaSophomoreG6–2BYU

Photo courtesy of the ACC

Leave a Reply