Home US SportsNCAAW Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo is the ACC Player of the Year

Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo is the ACC Player of the Year

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ACC Women’s Basketball Announces 2025-26 Award Winners

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (theACC.com) – Notre Dame junior guard Hannah Hidalgo has been chosen as the 2025-26 Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year, headlining the 2025-26 All-ACC Women’s Basketball Team and individual award winners.

This season marked the first time since 2021-22 the All-ACC teams were split between the coaches and the league’s Blue Ribbon Panel.

The media and coaches’ All-ACC Teams featured the same yearly award winners. Syracuse’s Uche Izoje was tabbed the ACC Rookie of the Year, while Louisville’s Imari Berry earned ACC Sixth Player of the Year honors. Notre Dame’s Cassandre Prosper was named the ACC Most Improved Player, and Duke head coach Kara Lawson earned ACC Coach of the Year honors for the first time in her career.

Hidalgo becomes the first player in ACC history to win both Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year in consecutive seasons. On the offensive end, the Merchantville, New Jersey, native leads the conference and ranks third nationally in scoring at 25.2 points per game. On January 22, she became the fastest player in ACC history to reach 2,000 career points. Hidalgo currently ranks second among active Division I players in total points with 2,281, a mark that ranks 12th on the ACC’s all-time scoring list. On Monday, she won her seventh ACC Player of the Week award, the most in a single season in conference history.

On the defensive side, Hidalgo has recorded 162 steals this season, the second most in ACC history. She is currently three steals shy of breaking the ACC single-season record set by former Virginia standout Donna Holt in 1987. Her 162 steals this season are more than the combined total of 15 Division I teams this year. This marks the third straight season Hidalgo has won Defensive Player of the Year, joining Duke’s Elizabeth Williams as the only players in league history to win the award in three consecutive seasons.

Izoje becomes just the second Syracuse player to win ACC Rookie of the Year, joining Kamilla Cardoso (2021). The Asaba, Delta State, Nigeria, native is nearly averaging a double-double this season with 15.0 points and 9.3 rebounds per game. The center ranks third in the ACC and leads league freshmen with 13 double-doubles this season, capped by three straight entering the postseason. Izoje was named ACC Rookie of the Week eight times this season, the most weekly honors by a Syracuse player in program history.

Lawson led Duke to its first ACC outright regular-season championship since 2013 with a 16-2 league record, its most conference wins since the 2012-13 season. After suffering six losses in their first nine games, the Blue Devils rattled off 17 straight victories to close the regular season at 21 wins and to earn the No. 1 seed in this week’s Ally ACC Women’s Basketball Tournament. Named to the 2026 Werner Ladder Naismith Women’s College Coach of the Year Watch List Presented by AXIA Time on February 18, Lawson becomes the first Duke coach to win ACC Coach of the Year since Joanne P. McCallie in 2013.

Berry ranks third on the team in scoring at 10.7 points per game. The Clarksville, Tennessee, native enters the postseason having scored in double figures in four of her last five games. Berry’s season was highlighted by a career-high 33 points in Louisville’s 88-80 overtime win over NC State on January 18, as she finished 14-of-23 from the field, pulled down 12 rebounds and added three steals. The guard was named ACC Player of the Week the following day. Berry becomes the first Cardinal to win ACC Sixth Player of the Year since Dana Evans in 2019.

Prosper, who entered the 2025-26 season without recording a career double-double, has posted six this year. The Montreal, Quebec, Canada, native, who averaged just 5.8 points per game in her first three seasons, ranks second on the team at 14.1 points per game. In ACC play, Prosper averaged 13.3 points per game and ranks ninth in the conference with a 46.9 shooting percentage. She becomes the first Notre Dame player to win the Most Improved Player award.

The All-ACC Teams consist of 10 players per team, while the All-Defensive and All-Freshman Teams consist of six players each. Seven players landed on both All-ACC First Teams.

The 2026 Ally ACC Women’s Basketball Tournament tips off Wednesday, March 4, at Gas South Arena in Greater Atlanta. The first and second rounds will air on ACC Network, while ESPN2 and ACC Network will split coverage of Friday’s quarterfinals. ESPN2 will continue coverage of Saturday’s semifinals, and Sunday’s championship game will air live on ESPN at 1 p.m. ET.

In its 49th year, the tournament’s 2026 edition marks the first time the Ally ACC Women’s Basketball Tournament will be played at a neutral site outside the Carolinas.

2025-26 All-ACC Women’s Basketball Team (as voted on by the league’s Blue Ribbon Panel)

Player of the Year: Hannah Hidalgo, Notre Dame
Defensive Player of the Year: Hannah Hidalgo
Rookie of the Year: Uche Izoje, Syracuse
Coach of the Year: Kara Lawson, Duke
Sixth Player of the Year: Imari Berry, Louisville
Most Improved Player: Cassandre Prosper, Notre Dame

All-ACC First Team

Hannah Hidalgo, Notre Dame 1,147

Toby Fournier, Duke 1,085

Kymora Johnson, Virginia 956

Khamil Pierre, NC State 923

Zoe Brooks, NC State 758

Uche Izoje, Syracuse 739

Laura Ziegler, Louisville 562

Taina Mair, Duke 481

Ra Shaya Kyle, Miami 469

Talayah Walker, Georgia Tech 435

All-ACC Second Team

Nyla Harris, North Carolina 411

Lulu Twidale, California 392

Ashlon Jackson, Duke 371

Tajianna Roberts, Louisville 336

Nunu Agara, Stanford 329

Carleigh Wenzel, Virginia Tech 326

Mia Moore, Clemson 289

Indya Nivar, North Carolina 287

Cassandre Prosper, Notre Dame 269

Imari Berry, Louisville 234

All-Defensive Team

Hannah Hidalgo, Notre Dame 326

Toby Fournier, Duke 215

Uche Izoje, Syracuse 197

Indya Nivar, North Carolina 121

Taina Mair, Duke 103

Brianna Turnage, Georgia Tech 83

All-Freshman Team

Uche Izoje, Syracuse 340

Lara Somfai, Stanford 239

Arianna Roberson, Duke 169

Nyla Brooks, North Carolina 142

Theresa Hagans, Pitt 97

Milan Brown, Wake Forest 84

Coach of the Year

Kara Lawson, Duke 193

Jeff Walz, Louisville 97

Felisha Legette-Jack, Syracuse 75

Sixth Player of the Year

Imari Berry, Louisville 223

Arianna Roberson, Duke 95

Nyla Brooks, North Carolina 68

Most Improved Player

Cassandre Prosper, Notre Dame 86

Brianna Turnage, Georgia Tech 74

Elif Istanbulluoglu, Louisville 69

2025-26 All-ACC Team (as voted on by the league’s head coaches)

Player of the Year: Hannah Hidalgo, Notre Dame
Defensive Player of the Year: Hannah Hidalgo
Rookie of the Year: Uche Izoje, Syracuse
Coach of the Year: Kara Lawson, Duke
Sixth Player of the Year: Imari Berry, Louisville
Most Improved Player: Cassandre Prosper, Notre Dame

All-ACC First Team

Hannah Hidalgo, Notre Dame 334

Toby Fournier, Duke 320

Kymora Johnson, Virginia 299

Khamil Pierre, NC State 274

Zoe Brooks, NC State 250

Uche Izoje, Syracuse 212

Laura Ziegler, Louisville 181

Nyla Harris, North Carolina 163

Tajianna Roberts, Louisville 150

Ashlon Jackson, Duke 147

All-ACC Second Team

Taina Mair, Duke 137

Ra Shaya Kyle, Miami 127

Mia Moore, Clemson 114

Lulu Twidale, California 112

Carleigh Wenzel, Virginia Tech 110

Carys Baker, Virginia Tech 99

Nunu Agara, Stanford 90

Talayah Walker, Georgia Tech 89

Indya Nivar, North Carolina 87

Laila Phelia, Syracuse 84

All-Defensive Team

Hannah Hidalgo, Notre Dame 102

Toby Fournier, Duke 60

Uche Izoje, Syracuse 55

Indya Nivar, North Carolina 53

Taina Mair, Duke 30

Brianna Turnage, Georgia Tech 19

All-Freshman Team

Uche Izoje, Syracuse 96

Arianna Roberson, Duke 62

Lara Somfai, Stanford 57

Nyla Brooks, North Carolina 47

Hailee Swain, Stanford 34

Theresa Hagans, Pitt 25

Coach of the Year

Kara Lawson, Duke 66

Jeff Walz, Louisville 41

Felisha Legette-Jack, Syracuse 21

Sixth Player of the Year

Imari Berry, Louisville 75

Arianna Roberson, Duke 32

Chloe Clardy, Stanford 24

Most Improved Player

Cassandre Prosper, Notre Dame 60

Elif Istanbulluoglu, Louisville 30

Zamareya Jones, NC State 22

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