UNC women likely have done enough to be hosts for first time in 10 years

By R.L. Bynum

North Carolina appears to have done enough to host first- and second-round games in the NCAA women’s tournament for the first time in 10 years, but the Tar Heels will have to wait a week to find out.

The No. 14 Tar Heels (27–7) haven’t hosted since 2015, when they went 26–9 and lost to South Carolina in the Sweet 16. The selection show airs on ESPN next Sunday at 8 p.m.

UNC put its hosting chances in peril by losing its final two regular-season games, including a 68–54 road loss at No. 11 and ACC champion Duke (26–7) and a damaging Quad 3 home loss to Virginia (17–15) while stars Alyssa Ustby and Reniya Kelly were nursing knee injuries.

But a 78–71 win over Boston College (when Ustby returned) and a 60–56 Quad 1 victory over No. 22 Florida State (with Kelly back) last week in the ACC tournament in Greensboro likely regained the Tar Heels’ status as one of the top-4 seeds, which comes with being able to host.

Hosting will allow Ustby to play again in Carmichael Arena after sitting out senior day.

ESPN’s Charlie Creme and Her Hoops Stats’ Megan Gauer project UNC to be a No. 4 seed and host the first two rounds in one of the Birmingham regionals, with No. 5 South Carolina as that region’s No. 1 seed. In a Friday projection before the win over the Seminoles, Connor Groel of CBS had UNC as a No. 3 seed.

Creme’s projections for UNC the last two seasons were wrong. He projected UNC to host in 2023, but the selection committee sent the Tar Heels to Columbus, Ohio, for the first two rounds.

Carolina has to hope more factors will be considered besides NET ranking since the Tar Heels were 20th in that metric after Saturday’s results. The Tar Heels are 7–5 in Quad 1 games, 4–1 in Quad 2, and 16–1 in all other games.

UNC is 1–3 against South Carolina in NCAA play. The Gamecocks eliminated the Heels last season (88–41 in the second round), in 2022 (69–61 in Sweet 16) and in 2015 (67–65 in Sweet 16), with UNC’s only NCAA win over South Carolina coming in 2014 (65–58 in the Elite Eight.)

Gauer has nine ACC teams in the field and Creme predicts the league will get eight bids.


UNC season statistics


DateDay/monthTimeOpponent/event
(current ranks)
TV/
record
October
30ThursdayL, 91–82No. 3 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. 4 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. 2 Texas8–2
———————————
7SundayW, 82–40vs. Boston Univ.9–2
14SundayL, 76–66, OTvs. No. 16 Louisville9–3,
0–1 ACC
17WednesdayW, 84–34vs. UNCW10–3
21SundayNoonvs. Charleston SouthernACCN Extra
29Monday8 p.m.at Boston CollegeACCN
January
1ThursdayNoonvs. CaliforniaACCN
4Sunday1 p.m.vs. StanfordESPN
11Sunday1 p.m.at No. 20 Notre DameESPN
15Thursday7 p.m.vs. MiamiACCN
Extra
18Sunday2 p.m.at Florida StateThe CW
22Thursday8 p.m.at Georgia TechACCN
25Sunday2 p.m.vs. SyracuseThe CW
February
2Monday6 p.m.at N.C. StateESPN2
5Thursday7 p.m.vs. ClemsonACCN
8Sunday2 p.m.vs. Wake ForestACCN
12Thursday6 p.m.vs. SMUACCN
15Sunday1 p.m.at DukeABC
19Thursday6 p.m.at Virginia TechACCN
22SundayNoonvs. PittsburghACCN
26Thursday7 p.m.at VirginiaACCN
Extra
March
1SundayNoonvs. DukeESPN
ACC tournament
4–8Wed.-SunGas South Arena,
Duluth, Ga.
NCAA tournament
20–24Fri.-Mon.First, second rounds
27–30Fri.-Mon.Regionals
Fort Worth, Texas,
and Sacramento, Calif.
April
3, 5Fri., SunFinal Four
Phoenix

Photo courtesy of the ACC

Leave a Reply