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Mock NWSL expansion draft: Who Angel City, San Diego should pick

Welcome to Just Women’s Sports’ NWSL mock expansion draft, where we’ll be simulating Thursday’s draft featuring Angel City FC and San Diego FC, when the two new franchises will have a chance to fill out their rosters.

Trades have been made. Unprotected lists have been filed. Now it’s time to see who will head to California.

For the sake of this exercise, we’ve recruited feature writer Claire Watkins (@ScoutRipley) to take the role of Angel City, while NWSL vet and JWS’ Integrated Partnerships Manager Haley Kopmeyer (@hkopmeyer) will play San Diego.

JWS Staff: Any opening comments you’d like to make after two weeks of blockbuster trades in the NWSL?

Claire Watkins: When I was going over the list, I was looking at names, and I was like, oh, that’s a great player. And then I went back and I looked at the rules, and I was like, I actually can’t take that player.

Even if you just look at Louisville’s list — Louisville’s got four or five really good players that you could pick up, but as Angel City, they’re not available to me. Or forwards from OL Reign, same deal. There are some good players there, but I think teams have done a pretty good job of limiting it without looking like they’re limiting it from the lists we have.

Haley Kopmeyer: And there’s stuff that we don’t even know about. I look at some of these players on this list that I know are available to me as San Diego and I’m like, there’s no way that player is available. I don’t believe it for a minute. I don’t know what their agreement is. I don’t know what third child is going to get named Becky Sauerbrunn for them not to take Becky, but she’s not going anywhere.

Claire: We saw Louisville be kind of ruthless with this last year, where they saw some of those rights that got dangled out and took them. A big one that is sitting out there is Kristie Mewis. Who’s going to grab Kristie Mewis and say, “She plays for our team now?” With the understanding that she might not be playing in the league next year—

Haley: Or that she’s practicing with another team right now.

Claire: Exactly. But you say, well, there’s a valuable asset. We’re going to grab that. But also, because you can only take one player per team, you can’t really go after rights for this year because you need players who can play day one.

Haley: Last year, it was just Louisville. Now, you’re competing with another team. You’re going up against somebody else for a limited number of players. I look back at my predictions for Louisville last year, and I got none of them right. But if I were to rate how they did in that draft, it’s not that well. I mean, it’s probably not a failing grade, but I don’t think anybody’s giving them anything above a B.

Claire: The most telling thing is that they have six players available that they drafted in the expansion draft last year that they did not protect this year.

Haley: Correct. Obviously, they got something out of the Christen Press trade. That probably will come back, ultimately, to be a big thing for them. But in the short term, they don’t even have the same coach that picked all of these players.

Claire: Ultimately, I think a lot of teams are working with the California teams in order to make this particular draft have as little relevance as possible. Some of that was, obviously teams would rather get something back than let a player go for nothing. I also think, for the California teams, that there’s an element of goodwill here. If this draft seems a little bit underwhelming, I think it’s by design, because they’re not trying to do anything super dramatic that would affect a player’s livelihood or rights or anything like that. I don’t think that that’s the energy this year.

Haley: An article came out not that long ago, and Tori Huster was quoted saying, like, “This year L.A. and San Diego are actually taking into consideration where players want to be and where they want to go.” By virtue of last year, we saw that that isn’t necessarily the default. I think the California clubs are doing their homework. I don’t think anybody’s going to feel super blindsided. I think people who end up with these new teams will be people that want to go there. I think most people within these organizations probably already know who’s being taken.

And I think both of these teams want to spend money and are not afraid of spending money.

Claire: Yes. Which is, again, another good reason not to pick up any of the allocated players, because you get paid if you don’t.

Haley: Should we jump into it?

Claire: Let’s do it.

JWS Staff: Angel City is officially on the clock.

Claire: With the first pick of the 2021 expansion draft, I, Angel City, choose Megan Oyster of the Houston Dash. Reasons why: I think she’s a great player. Angel City needs another center back. She’s a Chicago-land native. She and Sarah Gorden already know each other. She played at UCLA. This is my one pick where I can just go take the player that I want to start for the team immediately, without worrying about what happens next.

Round 1: Angel City takes Megan Oyster (Houston Dash) 

Haley: Nice. I, as San Diego, with the No. 2 pick — I look at my roster and it’s slowly coming together, but I think midfield is the biggest area of need. I am taking the playing rights to Emily van Egmond. I do think she’ll come back to the U.S. Obviously, she is on loan in Australia right now, but I think we see Emily, in one way or another, in a San Diego jersey.

Round 1: San Diego takes Emily van Egmond (Orlando Pride) 

Claire: Emily van Egmond also has very beachy vibes.

Haley: And it’s easier to get to Australia from the West Coast. I mean, that’s a real factor.

Claire: With the third pick in the expansion draft, I’m going to take Anna Heilferty of the Washington Spirit. She’s technically a midfielder. It’s a bit unfair to designate her that because she also played outside back for the Spirit this year. I like her because she’s versatile. Not knowing exactly where everyone’s going to fit on the pitch, but knowing that I, as Angel City, need some outside defenders and a lot of midfield depth, I like Heilferty. She’s young. She’s coachable. She stepped into a tough position with the Spirit. She had to come in due to some injuries for some of their starters this year, so she’s tested. She knows what it’s like to be in a winning environment. I like that I can put her in a couple of different places on the field. Technically, a Washington Spirit midfielder, but I could also use her at outside back. I like that about her.

Round 2: Angel City takes Anna Heilferty (Washington Spirit) 

Haley: Very nice. I couldn’t even pick from the Spirit, so I feel no personal threat. I’m turning my attention to the Reign. Even though Megan Rapinoe is sitting there being dangled in front of me, I’m not picking her up. I know we’ve got Alex Morgan coming over.

I was torn a bit here, but I am taking Sam Hiatt, defender from OL Reign. I’m looking for somebody young here. I’m looking for somebody to develop. We know we’ve got Abby Dahlkemper. I honestly went back and forth. My rotating list of names were Sam, Madison Hammond and Celia. I ultimately settled on Sam.

Round 2: San Diego takes Sam Hiatt (OL Reign) 

Claire: You are killing me positionally, but that’s how this was always going to go.

Haley: Who would’ve you taken?

Claire: I was going to take Madison Hammond if I could have.

Haley: I went back and forth a lot, honestly. They’re similar players.

Claire: The only thing that tipped Hammond over Hiatt for me is that Hammond is another player who can play out wide or centrally.

Haley: Sam Hiatt is also a Seattle kid, which works against me as well.

Claire: I think she’d go to San Diego. All right, since I cannot take a midfielder from Orlando and, I’m going to be honest, I am not sure I see anybody in the defense that I like or that I want to uproot, I’m going to do a bit of a fun flyer out of Orlando.

I’m going to pick up Abi Kim, who is one of their young forwards. She got minutes at the end of a number of games for Orlando. Really good super sub. She runs at defenders. She’s very energetic. She’s coachable. It’s going to be a molding opportunity, but I think with the other forwards that I have, learning from someone like Christen Press is the best you can possibly do. With the support Angel City can give, I think that she’ll develop.

Round 3: Angel City takes Abi Kim (Orlando Pride) 

Haley: That’s a good one. I wanted to throw a curveball, where the Thorns haven’t announced a goalkeeper coach yet. Maybe San Diego would rock the boat and take Nadine Angerer from Portland. It feels like something that would never happen, but the only league in the world where that might actually happen would be here.

But for my actual pick, I’m going to go to Houston. You took a Houston defender first. I was looking pretty hard at Chappy [Allysha Chapman]. Obviously, I cannot take her now. I’m a bit torn on this, but I think you want to keep bringing in a mix of young players and experience. The person on that roster I find most interesting right now is Sophie Schmidt. I’m going to take Sophie.

Round 3: San Diego takes Sophie Schmidt (Houston Dash) 

Again, would she go? I have no idea. Is she happy? Would she go somewhere else? Where is she in her career? I have no idea on any of that, but, in terms of knowing how important it is to have a strong midfield, that’s the area of the field that I’m always going to err on the side of experience and go for a few older players. I’m going to pick Sophie Schmidt. That’s a toss-up, but that’s my pick.

Claire: Nice. I think I have come to the end of my picks. I have one more from the Reign, and then I am done. I am going to take my $150,000 [for not taking a U.S. allocated player] very gladly. With allocation being phased out, there’s limited value to that anyway. 

And since I cannot take a defender from the Reign, I am going to pick up Dani Weatherholt simply because we have Julie Ertz, which is great, but we also know that Julie Ertz is coming back from injury. She is constantly out for international duty. She’s a great player who will be good for us when she is playing, but she’s not going to be there all the time.

Round 4: Angel City takes Dani Weatherholt (OL Reign) 

Dani Weatherholt is a tried-and-true, tested number six. Thinking positionally, you need to have a couple of players who can fill that role because, if you don’t have anybody there, then your center backs are going to hate you. I’m trying to look out for my Chicago-land duo of Megan Oyster and Sarah Gorden.

Haley: I’ve got Louisville left on the clock. This is probably one of the most interesting unprotected lists, in my opinion. You have the playing rights to Tobin [Heath]. You know Press is going to L.A. Would they end up getting both? Who knows? You already have so many national team-status players heading to those places. Do you pick up those rights and hold onto them? Do you take your money? Another person on that list who’s obviously super, super interesting is Savannah McCaskill up top. You know you need somebody to serve the ball into Alex. You know you need somebody who’s going to sit back there, be a workhorse. It seems like each year, Savannah gets a little bit closer to reaching that potential I think everybody thinks she has. I’m going to take Savannah McCaskill.

Round 4: San Diego takes Savannah McCaskill (Racing Louisville) 

She’s still really young, still got a lot of room to grow, a lot of upside. I’ll take my money for the players. And then, maybe you look at signing a player like Tobin somewhere down the line.

JWS Staff: Angel City is out of picks. Rumors are that Portland has protected its “core” from San Diego with a handshake deal. For the sake of this experiment, we’re going to have San Diego pick a Thorns player. Up to you, Haley, to say who is a “core” Portland player and who isn’t. 

Haley: I like Marissa Everett. Again, another young player. She’s had more experience than I think people expected on that Portland roster. At the same time, with the players that they do have, she is probably going to get lost in the shuffle at some point. So if I’m not allowed to take the core, Marissa Everett, under the assumption that she is not considered to be core, would probably be my pick there.

Round 5: San Diego takes Marissa Everett (Portland Thorns)

JWS Staff: There was a lot of hedging in the initial Equalizer report. It also suggested there could be an agreement in place where San Diego declined to select any Thorns player as part of the handshake deal.

Claire: Well, the thing about that report is it doesn’t make sense in that it’s a deal for two players for money. And for me, I’m Angel City, but if I were San Diego, I want to be a little bit like, “Well, what if we just took one player for free through the draft rather than give Portland money back for two?” It just seems like a deal that should have gotten done before the deadline. And because it didn’t, I’m not sure this makes sense anymore. We’ll see.

JWS Staff: Before we wrap, looking at these clubs’ rosters, with both those players who are confirmed and those we’ve picked today, how do you think they’ll do on the field next year?

Claire: I think both teams are going to have really cool starting elevens. And I think that’s pretty true to expansion form — if they have to go to their bench significantly, I think they might have trouble. You look at Angel City and this spine where you’ve got Press up top and then you’ve got Julie Ertz and then you’ve got Sarah Gordon and Simone Charley. You have these players and you’re thinking, “Wow, that’s a lot of really cool, dynamic players.”

But with the possibility that those players aren’t going to be available all of the time, or if the injury bug hits, then I think that that’s where they’re going to struggle. In my experience covering NWSL, I do think depth wins a lot, especially by the end of the regular season. I will say this, though: If Angel City and San Diego do well enough to be in playoff positions at the end of the year, they are some of the teams that I would want to play the least. Their starting elevens are going to be very talented.

Haley: Right now, the Angel City roster looks a little bit flashier, even with San Diego’s Alex Morgan signing. That doesn’t always equal success. I think we’ve seen that time and time again. And when I really dig into both teams, I see some of the players that San Diego has picked up — the Katie Johnsons, the Mackenzy Doniaks, and just some of these proven league players — who, more often than not, kind of do end up being depth. The starting eleven might not have as much firepower as Angel City, but I do think they’re going to have that depth. And for that reason, I think they might have a better chance of going the distance.

With L.A., you’re putting so much money into your starting eleven, you’re only a game or two from throwing some poor college kids into the fire when they aren’t ready for it.

Claire: I will say, though, that I think both teams are not just targeting players they like. There’s some positional awareness from both.

Louisville is a really good example of a team that had some nice pieces, especially in the attack, but they had no defensive midfield and that left their back line super exposed and so they would just give up goals all the time. It feels like we’re evolving, because it used to be that expansion teams would come in and get punked with other teams being like, “Here, take this player that you think is really cool, but we know that they can’t play a full 90 and they’re also a turnover machine.”

We’re seeing, I think, a fair amount of awareness coming in regarding positionally and true value. I think Angel City and San Diego have both picked up players that are starting level, even if for whatever reason some of them haven’t been starters.

I’m excited for these California teams. I think they are going to get one or two major wins and people are going to have to be like, “Oh, we have to take this seriously now. This is real.”

Haley: Totally agree. They’re destinations. Players want to go there. Plus, you’ve got five head coaches who have gotten fired this year. You have a lot of instability, a lot of people wanting to be in these new, fresh environments after all the things they’ve gone through over the past couple years. These are places that players genuinely want to be. And I think they’re going to go.

Claire: I do think that California is a pull. Not for everybody, but for a lot of players, especially players who are from there because that’s a hotbed of the youth scene. A lot of players also went to college in California. 

The other element though, too, is this need for a fresh start, where you have players who wouldn’t necessarily say, “That club was terrible,” but they’ve just gone through a lot over the last couple of years and they need something new. And it doesn’t get newer than a brand new California team. When you have all these established teams bringing in new coaches, for players, it’s like, “Well, I’m starting over anyway, so why not start over somewhere new and exciting?”

Chawinga Crowned NWSL MVP as Bethune, Sams Win Additional 2024 Awards

KC goalkeeper AD Franch lifts Temwa Chawinga on her shoulder after a win.
Current striker Temwa Chawinga won the 2024 MVP award in her first NWSL season on Friday. (Peter Aiken/Imagn Images)

After securing spots on the Best XI First Team on Monday, Kansas City's Temwa Chawinga, Washington's Croix Bethune, and Orlando's Emily Sams picked up even more 2024 NWSL awards this week.

On Friday, KC striker Chawinga added 2024 MVP to her stacked resume, one day after Bethune and Sams snagged their respective position awards.

A striking first NWSL season for KC's Chawinga

It's almost impossible to believe that 2024 was Chawinga's first NWSL season, but the newly minted MVP only joined Kansas City in January.

The Malawi international blasted into the league's history books with 20 goals this year, ousting former NWSL star Sam Kerr from atop the single-season scoring record.

That effort earned the Current star the 2024 Golden Boot. She additionally notched league first along the way, becoming the only player to ever score against all teams in a single season.

Proving herself 2024's leader in capitalizing on opportunities, the 26-year-old took the second-most shots in the league but put the most on target. A menace in the box, her subsequent speed and agility helped Chawinga lead the NWSL with 18 of her 20 goals netted from inside the 18.

"We are so proud of Temwa for earning this award," said KC head coach Vlatko Andonovski on Friday. "Temwa has come so far this season in a short amount of time and is so important to our team, she is the clear MVP of both our team and the league."

Washington rookie Croix Bethune runs across the pitch in a match.
2024 Rookie of the Year Croix Bethune became the first NWSL Midfielder of the Year on Thursday. (David Gonzales/USA TODAY Sports)

Bethune's unmatched NWSL rookie debut

Speaking of history-making first-year NWSL players, Washington standout Bethune became a bonafide league star in her professional debut, one that earned her three end-of-season awards. Along with her Best XI First Team nod, Bethune became the 2024 Rookie of the Year on Tuesday, then capped her individual hardware haul by being named the NWSL's first-ever Midfielder of the Year on Thursday.

As the No. 3 overall pick in the last-ever NWSL Draft, the Georgia alum made her presence on the professional pitch immediately known, snagging Rookie of the Month honors for every month she was eligible. She also became the first rookie to ever notch three assists in a single match.

Bethune, who also won Olympic gold with the USWNT in August, notched five goals and an NWSL record-tying 10 assists in her 2024 campaign. Even more impressively, the Spirit star did so in just 17 games, missing the last nine matches after a late-August injury ended her season.

"I'm so grateful," Bethune told JWS at NWSL Championship Media Day in Kansas City after winning Midfielder of the Year. "Being out a lot of the season with injury [and] being able to achieve goals that I set for myself — thank you to the league and everyone who supports me."

Orlando center back Emily Sams lifts her 2024 NWSL Defender of the Year trophy in the air.
Emily Sams is the first Orlando player to win Defender of the Year. (Kylie Graham/Imagn Images)

Sams named top NWSL defender

After helping Orlando lead the NWSL with 13 shutouts, fewest goals conceded, and most consecutive minutes without giving up a goal, center back Sams was named 2024 Defender of the Year (DOTY) on Thursday, becoming the first Pride player to earn the honor.

Sams now joins an elite club of seven defenders to ever win the award, including four-time DOTY Becky Sauerbrunn and last year's back-to-back winner Naomi Girma.

Shield-winners Orlando led the NWSL this season, but Sams topped the Pride's backline, leading the club in clearances, blocks, and possessions in the defensive third. Plus, the 25-year-old notched the second-most recoveries on the NWSL's stat sheet with 163, and she'll look to continue shutting down opponents when Orlando faces Washington in Saturday's 2024 NWSL Championship.

Individual numbers aside, Sams was quick to share credit with her teammates on Thursday, saying, "this is literally impossible without all of you guys. Shout out to Anna, Kylie, Bells, Corey and everyone else who played on the backline this year — I can't do what I do without you guys. Lets go win the championship."

2024 NWSL end-of-season awards

  • Golden Boot: Temwa Chawinga, KC Current
  • MVP: Temwa Chawinga, KC Current
  • Rookie of the Year: Croix Bethune, Washington Spirit
  • Midfielder of the Year: Croix Bethune, Washington Spirit
  • Defender of the Year: Emily Sams, Orlando Pride
  • Goalkeeper of the Year: Ann-Katrin Berger, Gotham FC
  • Coach of the Year: Seb Hines, Orlando Pride

USWNT to Face Japan, Australia, Colombia in 2025 SheBelieves Cup

The USWNT raise their 2024 SheBelieves Cup trophy.
The USWNT won their seventh SheBelieves Cup in 2024. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

The 2025 SheBelieves Cup field is officially set, as the world No. 1 USWNT's path to a sixth-straight victory in the annual tournament will feature matchups with 2024 Olympians No. 7 Japan, No. 15 Australia, and No. 21 Colombia.

After the Paris Olympic Games forced an abbreviated four-match, two-day format in 2024, this 10th edition will return to the tournament's original setup of three double-headers in February. Round-robin play will again determine the Cup champion via accumulated points, with goal differential serving as tiebreaker.

The 2025 tournament will kick off at Houston's Shell Energy Stadium on February 20th. The quartet will then battle at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona on the 23rd before wrapping up the Cup at San Diego's Snapdragon Stadium on the 26th.

USWNT goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher and defender Emily Sonnett pose with the 2024 SheBelieves Cup trophy.
Alyssa Naeher and Emily Sonnett have been on all nine US SheBelieves Cup rosters. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

A history of USWNT SheBelieves dominance

While Australia and Colombia will make their SheBelieves Cup debuts, the 2025 competition will be Japan's third straight trip and fifth overall appearance in the US-hosted tournament.

Other than France's 2017 victory and England's 2019 title, the USWNT has won all other iterations for a total of seven trophies.

That streak, plus their astounding 71-2-15 combined all-time record against the three visitors — marred only by single 1-0 losses to Japan in 2012 and Australia in 2018 — make the US heavily favored to win an eighth SheBelieves Cup.

World-class contenders square off for SheBelieves

That said, it won't be easy, as every 2025 contender poses a challenge. Each has already played the USA this year, starting when Colombia fell 3-0 to the States in their Concacaf W Gold Cup quarterfinal in March.

Las Cafeteras didn't have to face the eventual gold medalists during the 2024 Olympics, unlike Australia and Japan. The USWNT knocked the Matildas out of the Paris tournament with a 2-1 win in group play, then narrowly escaped a tough Nadeshiko side in a 1-0 overtime quarterfinal thriller.

All three visiting teams will be gunning for a redemption win over the US come February. That high-stakes competition is something US head coach Emma Hayes welcomes.

"This will be my first SheBelieves Cup, but I’ve followed the tournament, and it always produces close games between top teams," the US boss said in Wednesday’s announcement.

"All four of these teams were in the last World Cup and Olympics, and all are in the building process to qualify for the next World Cup, so to get three games against talented teams and players in a format that replicates group play at a world championship is valuable in our process. All the games will be great tests for the teams and fun for all the fans."

Japan's Seike Kiko and the USWNT's Jenna Nighswonger battle for position during the 2024 SheBelieves Cup.
Japan will join the SheBelieves Cup for the fifth time in 2025. (Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The full 2025 SheBelieves Cup schedule for the USWNT

  • Thursday, February 20th (Shell Energy Stadium, Houston, Texas)
    • Japan vs. Australia, 5 PM ET
    • USWNT vs. Colombia, 8 PM ET
  • Sunday, February 23rd (State Farm Stadium, Glendale, Arizona)
    • Colombia vs. Japan, 2 PM ET
    • USWNT vs. Australia, 5 PM ET
  • Wednesday, February 26th (Snapdragon Stadium, San Diego, California)
    • Australia vs. Colombia, 7:30 PM ET
    • USWNT vs. Japan, 10:30 PM ET

How to watch the USWNT at the 2025 SheBelieves Cup

Tickets for all 2025 SheBelieves Cup dates and locations are currently available online.

For those unable to make the trip, all USWNT matches will air live on TBS, with the three non-US games will be available to stream on Max.

Weekend NCAA Basketball Action Features Top-Ranked College Matchups

South Carolina's Raven Johnson drives past UCLA's Londynn Jones to the basket.
The last meeting between South Carolina and UCLA was in 2023's March Madness. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

At least two of the nation's best NCAA basketball teams will see their undefeated 2024/25 campaigns end this weekend, when a pair of cutthroat college clashes tests the limits of four championship contenders.

First, No. 6 Notre Dame will visit No. 3 USC on Saturday, before No. 1 South Carolina takes on the Trojans’ crosstown rival No. 5 UCLA on Sunday.

The Notre Dame bench cheers as guard Hannah Hidalgo puts up a lay-up in an NCAA college basketball game.
Notre Dame's Hannah Hidalgo will square off against fellow sophomore superstar, USC's JuJu Watkins, on Saturday. (Michael Clubb/South Bend Tribune/ USA Today Network/Imagn Images)

Saturday's NCAA showdown features superstar sophomores

All eyes will be on preseason All-American sophomore guards JuJu Watkins and Hannah Hidalgo when the Irish contend with their season's first ranked opponent on Saturday.

Already a phenom, Watkins became the fastest Trojan to 1,000 career points last Friday — and she did it by a mile. The previous record-holder, legend Cheryl Miller, needed 48 games to hit the same mark.

As for Hidalgo, she's already hit the century mark across Notre Dame’s four matchups to average 25 points per game — the fifth-best offensive rate in the country.

The Irish's other secret weapon, guard Olivia Miles, is also back, returning from her February 2023 ACL tear with a vengeance in the Irish's season opener. Already averaging 18.3 points per game, Miles has also banked 27 assists over Notre Dame's four games — more than twice that of any of her teammates.

Between Hildago and Miles, plus ND's admittedly lopsided matchups so far, the South Bend squad has blasted their opponents by a 42.5-point average scoring margin this season.

It's a similar story for USC, who have been on a tear since their narrow 68-66 season-opening win over then-No. 20 Ole Miss. The Trojans thrashed their next three opponents by outscoring them by a gobsmacking average of 57 points.

The Trojans will need all that offense, plus the stylings of Watkins and All-American forward Kiki Iriafen, to handle the Irish on Saturday. Notre Dame holds the 8-2 all-time series advantage between the two teams, though they haven't squared off since 2011. Should USC emerge victorious, it will be their first win over the Irish since 2006.

UCLA center Lauren Betts celebrates a play in an NCAA college basketball game.
UCLA standout Lauren Betts will try to dominate the paint over South Carolina's Chloe Kitts on Sunday. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

Sunday puts powerhouses in the paint

The subsequent Sunday battle between UCLA and South Carolina — who set a program-record 43-game win streak on Wednesday — will likely be decided in the paint, where both team's superstars thrive.

The Gamecocks' depth keeps their stat sheet fairly balanced, making junior forward Chloe Kitts’s team-leading rates in scoring and rebounding that much more impressive.

That said, her UCLA counterpart, junior center Lauren Betts, has been dominant. By averaging a double-double across the Bruins' four tilts with 21.5 points and 11.5 rebounds per game, Betts is already sparking National Player of the Year commentary.

Both squads began their 2024/25 campaigns with tight wins, but while UCLA's came over then-No. 17 Louisville, South Carolina was nearly shocked by unranked Michigan. On the other hand, the Gamecocks are the only team to have handled a Top-10 opponent so far this season, confidently downing then-No. 9 NC State just six days after their near-disaster with the Wolverines.

Sunday's showdown kicks off a gauntlet of four ranked matchups in five games for South Carolina. Even though UCLA haven't defeated the Gamecocks this century, the Bruins are the biggest challenge to the reigning champions' undefeated streak on their 2024 docket.

Depending on which version of South Carolina shows up, a combination of the bigs and each team's overall consistency will likely determine Sunday's victor.

How to watch this weekend's Top-6 NCAA basketball games

Notre Dame and USC will tip off the weekend's matchups at 4 PM ET on Saturday, airing live on NBC.

On Sunday, FS1 will broadcast South Carolina vs. UCLA at 4 PM ET on Sunday.

Direct from Kansas City, ‘The Late Sub’ Previews the 2024 NWSL Championship

Key NWSL Championship player Spirit forward Trinity Rodman makes a heart sign at fans after an NWSL match.
Washington will lean on top scorer Trinity Rodman in Saturday's NWSL Championship match. (Amber Searls/Imagn Images)

On today's episode of The Late Sub, host Claire Watkins joins the chat from Kansas City, where Orlando Pride and Washington Spirit will kick off the 2024 NWSL Championship on Saturday.

Watkins breaks down the full Championship matchup, from each team's path to the Final to the tactics to expect on Saturday's pitch and everything in between. She also dishes on key players to watch — including Pride star Barbra Banda and Spirit attacker Trinity Rodman — and some of the recent injuries keeping star athletes on the sidelines.

Later, Watkins congratulates UConn head coach Geno Auriemma on Wednesday's record-breaking 1,217th victory — one that made saw him pass retired Stanford boss Tara VanDerveer to become the winningest college basketball coach in NCAA history.

The Late Sub with Claire Watkins brings you the latest news and freshest takes in women’s sports. This is the weekly rundown you’ve been missing, covering the USWNT, NWSL, WNBA, college hoops, and whatever else is popping off in women’s sports each week. Special guest appearances with the biggest names in women’s sports make The Late Sub a must-listen for every fan. Follow Claire on X/Twitter @ScoutRipley and subscribe to the Just Women’s Sports newsletter for more.

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