FORT WORTH, TX ― When the No. 1 Texas Longhorns meet the No. 2 Michigan Wolverines in the Elite Eight at Dickies Arena on March 29, there will be no shortage of confidence.

The Longhorns are seeking their first championship since 1986. The Wolverines have never won a women’s basketball title. Still, both teams believe they belong on the Elite Eight stage.

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“You had to be a contender before you were a champion. You know, you had to be there before you were on the other side,” Michigan head coach Kim Barnes Arico said, referencing a quote that guard Olivia Olson recently shared with the team.

“That’s kind of where our program is right now. You know, we’re a contender, and we’ve gotten to this point. We have the pieces to be champions. So we are in the Elite Eight with a lot of programs that have rich basketball tradition.”

The Wolverines are back in the Elite Eight for the first time since 2022. However, to get to the Final Four, Barnes Arico and her team will have to beat Texas coach Vic Schaefer and a program that’s very familiar with the biggest stage in women’s college basketball. The Longhorns have been to five Final Fours, including an appearance last year.

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“You understand the urgency that you have to have, the focus and the discipline that you have, and the connectivity and chemistry that you have to have with your teammates at this moment, because any game could be your last game,” Texas guard Rori Harmon said.

“You don’t want to look back and regret, ‘Oh, I didn’t play hard enough,’ or you didn’t leave it out on the court. But, having that experience with Coach Schaefer and a few of us who have been here a couple of times ― a few times ― it definitely helps. We’re trying to get that to permeate throughout our team.”

The team that emerges victorious after Monday’s matchup will head to Phoenix for the 2026 Women’s Final Four. Final Four play begins Friday, April 3. The national championship is Sunday, April 5.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

UConn’s Azzi Fudd and Sarah Strong are among the top players set to tipoff March Madness. Here’s the best players in women’s college basketball:

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

UConn’s Azzi Fudd and Sarah Strong are among the top players set to tipoff March Madness. Here’s the best players in women’s college basketball:

2 / 11

Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

It’s hard to believe Sarah Strong could top her record-breaking freshman season, but she’s one-upped herself. Strong has career highs in points (18.5), assists (4.1), steals (3.4), field goal percentage (60.1%) and free throw percentage (87.3%). She leads UConn in nearly every statical category, including points, rebounds, steals and blocks. Expect Strong to have a strong showing in the NCAA Tournament. She set the freshmen points record in an NCAA Tournament (114) last season.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

UCLA Bruins center Lauren Betts’ stats are slightly down from last season, but she’s no less dominant. She leads UCLA in points (16.4), rebounds (8.6) and blocks (1.9) per game and has 11 double-doubles. Her efforts earned her Big Ten Player of the Year and Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year honors, becoming the first player in Big Ten history to earn both in the same season.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

Texas Longhorns forward Madison Booker has reached new heights this season earning first-team All-SEC after recording career highs in points (18.9), steals (2.3) and field goal percentage (51.6%), which she raised from 46.1% last season. Booker leads the Longhorns in scoring and has been in double-digits for all but two games this season. She’s only a junior, but she’s already climbed to No. 6 on Texas’ all-time scoring list with 1,873 points career points entering March Madness.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

UConn Huskies senior guard Azzi is shooting lights out from the 3-point line. She’s averaging a career-high 44.6% from beyond the arc and her 104 3-pointers rank second in the nation. Her field goal percentage (48.9%) also marks a career-high. Fudd has also helped anchor UConn’s top-ranked scoring defense. She’s one of three Huskies to have at least 85 steals this season, joining Sarah Strong (111) and KK Arnold (93). Fudd is also flirting with the 50-40-90 stat line — 50% from the field, 40% from the 3-point line and 90% from the free throw line.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

Vanderbilt’s Mikayla Blakes was named the SEC Player of the Year after leading Vanderbilt to its first 27-win regular season in program history. Blakes leads the nation in scoring averaging 27.0 points per game, including 12 games of 30 or more points. Ten of those 12 games came in conference play. Blakes has recorded double-digit points in every game this season and is currently riding a 50 game double-digit scoring streak, the longest active streak in the SEC and third longest in NCAA Division I women’s basketball. Blakes is the second Vanderbilt star to win SEC Player of the Year and the first sophomore since South Carolina’s A’ja Wilson in 2016.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

Olivia Miles’ transfer from Notre Dame to TCU has been seamless if you look at her stat line. Miles is the centerpiece of the Horned Frogs’ offense and has upped her scoring average from 15.4 points last season to a career-high 19.6 points. Miles tops the nation with five triple doubles and has done so efficiently, with career highs in field goal percentage (48.7) and free throw percentage (84.4%).

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

Iowa State Cyclones center Audi Crooks ended the regular season with a bang, dropping 41 points and 13 rebounds against Kansas State — shooting an efficient 16-of-19 from the field. That marked Crooks’ fourth 40-point game of the season and 12th double-double. Crooks has scored in double digits every game this season, extending her streak to 97 straight career games — the longest active streak in the nation. She became the fastest player in Big 12 history to reach 2,000 points on Jan. 28 and picked up an unanimous first-team All-Big 12 nod.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

Ohio State’s Jaloni Cambridge has arrived! The sophomore guard is in midst of a breakout season. She upped her points per game from 15.4 last season to 22.8, which ranks seventh in the nation. Her field-goal percentage also increased by nearly eight points to 49.0%. She’s scored double-digit points in every game this season and became the 40th Buckeye to surpass 1,000 career points on Feb. 8 against Oregon. She’s only the fifth Ohio State player to record 700 points in a season.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

South Carolina Gamecocks forward Joyce Edwards has taken a large step this season. The 6-foot-3 forward slid into the starting lineup after senior forward Chloe Kitts was ruled out for the season with an ACL injury in her right knee. Edwards has powered South Carolina to the fourth-best scoring offense in the nation (86.3 points per game). She’s averaging a team-high 19.6 points in 34 starts, up from 12.7 points and one start her freshman year. Her stat line is rounded out by 6.3 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 1.7 steals per game.

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Players to watch in 2026 women’s NCAA basketball tournament

Notre Dame Fighting Irish guard Hannah Hidalgo has been a walking highlight reel. Hidalgo turned in career highs in points, steals, rebounds, field-goal percentage and made ACC history by winning both Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year in consecutive seasons. Hidalgo set an NCAA record with 16 steals in a game and scored a school-record 44 points in Notre Dame’s 85-58 win over Akron on Nov. 12. She leads the nation in total steals (173), which set a single-season ACC record.

What time is Texas vs. Michigan Elite Eight game?

Location: Dickies Arena (Fort Worth, Texas)

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The Texas Longhorns will play the Michigan Wolverines in the Elite Eight round of the 2026 Women’s NCAA Tournament at 7 p.m. ET on Monday, March 30, at Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, Texas.

Texas vs. Michigan: TV, streaming

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Texas women’s basketball vs. Michigan in Elite Eight: TV, streaming