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Women’s college basketball stat leaders to watch across the nation

NaLyssa Smith. (G Fiume/Getty Images)

When I was growing up, my dad would always tease me for thinking with my heart rather than my head when it came to sports. I was the kind of kid who would pick my favorite team to win it all in a bracket challenge even if they were a 12-seed. My dad, meanwhile, made his living as a scientist, and in science, numbers are truth.

“Stats don’t lie,” he would always say. Now, I still think they do at times, but I’ve found a middle ground when it comes to head and heart. And if nothing else, unpacking team and player stats can be an enlightening exercise.

So, for this week’s women’s college basketball notebook, let’s check out some of the most notable stat leaders across the country.

Points per game

Jasmine Dickey, Delaware, 25.6

Since Elena Delle Donne graduated in 2013, the Blue Hens haven’t gotten much attention. Jasmine Dickey gives Delaware basketball fans a new reason to tune in. Through 10 games, she’s leading the country with a whopping 25.6 points per game.

That’s pretty crazy when you consider that, before the season started, her career-high in a game was 21. She beat that in the first game of the season, scoring 25 points on 7-for-16 shooting from the field and 10-for-12 from the free-throw line against Chestnut Hill. Then on Nov. 26, she set a new career-high that’s going to be hard to top, draining 48 points against Eastern Michigan. It’s been a stellar season for Dickey, who had her high school jersey retired at Catonsville High School on Saturday.

Rebounds per game

NaLyssa Smith, Baylor, 13.2

You may not have heard of Dickey, but I’m guessing NaLyssa Smith rings a bell. If anything, hers is a name you should get used to. Smith is projected to be the No. 1 or No. 2 pick in the 2022 WNBA Draft in April. Until then, she’s a dominant force for Baylor.

The 2021 All-American had a career-high 19 rebounds against Houston on Nov. 27 and hasn’t had a game with fewer than 10 since Baylor’s season-opener against Texas State, when she pulled down seven. Through 11 games, Smith has recorded an NCAA-leading 10 double-doubles and has had four contests with five or more offensive rebounds.

Assist-to-turnover ratio

Tommi Olson, Wyoming, 4.33

Here’s another name that probably isn’t on many non-Wyoming fans’ radars, so let’s put Olson’s 4.33 assist-to-turnover ratio in perspective. No. 2 on the list is UConn’s Paige Bueckers, who is renowned for her passing and decision-making. So, statistically speaking, Olson is 0.22 better than Bueckers.

The Wyoming senior is very much a pass-first point guard — she only averages 2.5 points per game — but she’s started all eight games for the 4-4 Cowgirls this season. In half of those games, Olson hasn’t committed a single turnover. And here’s a fun fact that has nothing to do with stats but is something my heart, not my head, told me to include: Olson’s mom, Elsa Olson, was a four-year player on the Wyoming basketball team from 1981-84.

Free throws made

Veronica Burton, Northwestern, 72

There’s not a coach in the country who doesn’t stress the importance of free-throw shooting. Free throws are literally free points — it’s in the name — so Burton’s 72 makes are impressive.

Even more impressive, though, is when you couple that number with her shooting percentage. The Northwestern senior is making 91.1 percent of her free throws, and so far this season, she’s given the Wildcats six extra points per game at the free-throw line. In a Dec. 2 win over Clemson, she had a season-high 15 attempts and made 14 of them. Northwestern won that game by 11 points.

Triple-doubles

Caitlin Clark, Iowa, 2

The fact that any player has more than one triple-double at this point in the season is a feat worthy of recognition. Clark’s first of the season — and second of her career — came in an 87-67 win over Southern on Nov. 17, when the Iowa sophomore had 16 points, 10 assists and 10 rebounds. She picked up the second against Big Ten opponent Michigan State on Dec. 5, finishing with 24 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds in an 88-61 victory. The performance was especially important for the Hawkeyes, who were coming off of a 79-64 loss to Duke on Dec. 2, their first of the season. Clark’s stat-stuffing night helped them get back on track to open conference play.

Bonus stat

Michigan beats Baylor

This doesn’t exactly qualify as a stat, but it does include a number, so we are going to let it slide because there is no way I could write this notebook and not talk about Michigan. The No. 13 Wolverines upset No. 5 Baylor 74-68 in overtime on Sunday, avenging their Sweet 16 defeat to the Bears in last season’s NCAA Tournament.

Here is where the stats come in: Michigan had never defeated a top-five opponent in the history of the program. The Wolverines were 0-33 all-time, a stat that now reads 1-33. They did it with Naz Hillmon on the bench with five fouls for the overtime period, after the senior forward had 15 points and 10 rebounds during regulation. Senior guard Leigha Brown led Michigan with 25 points, five rebounds and four assists.

JWS’ Top 25 in Week 7

  1. South Carolina (11-0)
  2. Stanford (8-2)
  3. NC State (12-2)
  4. Arizona (10-0)
  5. Indiana (10-2)
  6. Louisville (11-1)
  7. Michigan (12-1)
  8. Iowa (7-2)
  9. Tennessee (9-1)
  10. UConn (6-3)
  11. Baylor (9-3)
  12. Maryland (9-3)
  13. Texas (8-1)
  14. Iowa State (12-1)
  15. South Florida (8-3)
  16. Ohio State (8-2)
  17. Duke (8-1)
  18. Georgia Tech (10-2)
  19. Georgia (11-1)
  20. BYU (9-1)
  21. Kentucky (8-3)
  22. Notre Dame (10-2)
  23. Oregon State (7-3)
  24. Florida Gulf Coast (9-1)
  25. LSU (9-1)

Eden Laase is a contributing writer at Just Women’s Sports. She previously ran her own high school sports website in Michigan after covering college hockey and interning at Sports Illustrated. Follow her on Twitter @eden_laase.

Chicago Sky Star Angel Reese Expands Film and TV Portfolio

Chicago Sky star Angel Reese poses in a director's chair for the Netflix series "Hunting Wives."
Angel Reese made her film debut playing herself in a cameo in Netflix's "A House of Dynamite." (Dana Hawley/Netflix)

WNBA star Angel Reese is lighting up the silver screen, with the Chicago Sky forward racking up multiple film and TV credits during the league's offseason.

On Tuesday, Netflix revealed that Reese will play a character called "Trainer Barbie" in the second season of the streamer's hit show, The Hunting Wives.

Already a fan of the series, Reese's told Hunting Wives creator Rebecca Cutter to "just let me know if you need me for season 2" on X last summer — a conversation that helped spark the basketball star's casting.

Tuesday's news follows last week's announcement that Reese and Las Vegas Aces star center A'ja Wilson will each voice a role in the upcoming animated film GOAT, produced by the NBA's Golden State Warriors superstar Steph Curry.

When the film hits theaters on February 13th, fans will see Reese as Propp, a polar bear, while Wilson plays a reptile called Kouyate.

Reese first opened her acting portfolio by playing herself in a cameo in the October 2025 Netflix film A House of Dynamite, with Hunting Wives marking the 23-year-old's first foray into a scripted series.

The eight-episode second season of the Netflix show is currently in production, though a premiere date is still unknown.

USWNT Head Coach Emma Hayes Says Star Trinity Rodman is Ready for “Next Steps”

USWNT head coach Emma Hayes shakes hands with forward Trinity Rodman during a 2024 match.
Forward Trinity Rodman is currently in USWNT training camp for the first time since April 2025. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

USWNT manager Emma Hayes is eager to see star forward Trinity Rodman back on the pitch, as the 23-year-old forward returned to the national team roster for the first time since April this week.

"This week, I said we've missed you in many ways, most of all because she just brings a little bit of color," Hayes said on ESPN's Futbol W on Wednesday. "She's got a great personality and she injects that into the environment."

"I've given her some responsibility this week and I think it's good for her," Hayes continued. "And she wants that, she's ready to take the next steps in her career."

A lingering back injury compounded by a late-season MCL sprain saw Rodman's USWNT appearances severely limited in 2025.

The NWSL free agent also made headlines when this month's non-FIFA window US training camp roster dropped, with Rodman listed as "unattached" as she negotiates a new contract with the Washington Spirit.

"I think the thing for her this year is she's got to take responsibility, not just on the field but off the field," Hayes said of Rodman's recovery. "It's all about the other 22 hours, and what you do with that. If she can nail that, then I expect her to continue to thrive."

How to watch Rodman with the USWNT this week

The world No. 2 USWNT will take on No. 46 Paraguay in the team's first 2026 friendly on Saturday.

The clash will kick off live at 5:30 PM ET on TNT.

Maryland Women’s Basketball Looks to Upset Iowa in Thursday’s NCAA Slate

Maryland head coach Brenda Frese and forward Isimenme Ozzy-Momodu react to a call during a 2025/26 NCAA basketball game.
Maryland dropped two NCAA basketball games against ranked opponents in the last two weeks. (Greg Fiume/Getty Images)

The No. 15 Maryland Terrapins are hunting an upset, as the once-Top 10 college basketball squad looks to bounce back from two straight ranked losses when they face a rising No. 10 Iowa side on Thursday night.

Once ranked as high as No. 7 in the 2025/26 NCAA season, conference losses to No. 12 Ohio State and No. 3 UCLA sent the Big Ten mainstay skidding in recent weeks.

"Every time this team has not had the outcome that they've wanted, they've done a tremendous job of just really taking the lessons and learning from them, and being ready to move on against their next opponent," Maryland head coach Brenda Frese said.

After last year's NCAA tournament exit in the Sweet Sixteen round, the Terps entered the 2025/26 season anticipating an even deeper run, but a rash of season-ending injuries have forced Maryland to take a different approach.

"Clearly, the injury bug has not been kind to us," Frese said after losing senior guard Kaylene Smikle to a December knee injury. "But I will say that the resiliency in this locker room, as you just witnessed, is something I haven't seen in a really long time."

How to watch Iowa vs. Maryland basketball on Thursday

The No. 15 Terrapins will host the No. 10 Hawkeyes at 6 PM ET on Thursday, with live coverage airing on Peacock.

WNBA Drops 2026 Schedule Amid Ongoing CBA Negotiations

Two basketballs rest on a row of WNBA and AT&T branded chairs before a 2025 game.
The 2026 WNBA season schedule announcement is part of the league's status quo operations. (Amy Abramson-Denhoff/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The 2026 WNBA schedule has arrived, as the league released key dates on Wednesday despite ongoing CBA talks that threaten to delay the start of the upcoming season.

Opening day will be Friday, May 8th, when the WNBA tips off with a tripleheader featuring incoming expansion side Toronto Tempo against the Washington Mystics, the New York Liberty hosting the Connecticut Sun, and the Golden State Valkyries visiting the Seattle Storm.

Fellow 2026 addition Portland Fire will debut on Saturday, May 9th, hosting the Chicago Sky to close out another tripleheader that includes a 2025 WNBA Finals rematch between the reigning champion Las Vegas Aces and the Phoenix Mercury, as well as a Rookie of the Year showdown between the Paige Bueckers-led Dallas Wings and Caitlin Clark's Indiana Fever.

Other 2026 season highlights include the return of the annual WNBA Commissioner's Cup in June and the Chicago Sky-hosted All-Star Weekend in late July, with the league set to pause for a two-week break in early September to allow its stars to compete in the FIBA World Cup.

After the regular-season closes on Thursday, September 24th, the 2026 WNBA Playoffs will tip off on Sunday, September 27th, with a repeat of last year's best-of-three first round, best-of-five semifinals round, and best-of-seven Finals.

Notably, the 2026 WNBA schedule drop falls within the current status quo period, which allows the league to conduct certain aspects of its business as usual under the old CBA while continuing to negotiate new terms with the players union.

"I'm just starting to see [the light at the end of the tunnel]," New York Liberty star Breanna Stewart told Front Office Sports this week, hinting at a bargaining resolution while an official work stoppage remains on the table.