Home US SportsNCAAW Notre Dame women’s basketball in Elite 8 thanks to core quartet

Notre Dame women’s basketball in Elite 8 thanks to core quartet

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FORT WORTH, Texas – Sometimes, the power of friendship is real. Notre Dame women’s basketball’s roster is full of five-star recruits, yes, but the 2025-26 Irish were by no means expected to be the team that broke the streak of four straight Sweet Sixteen losses.

Not if last year’s squad that featured Hannah Hidalgo, Olivia Miles, Sonia Citron and others couldn’t. Quite frankly, the 2025-26 Notre Dame squad has done more than just surpass its middling expectations.

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Making their first Elite Eight since 2019, the 6-seed Irish have proved that what might matter most in March Madness is team chemistry. At least, that’s what is most important to them.

“Those girls are my sisters; we have such an undeniable bond,” senior KK Bransford said. “Knowing how sad we were last year — lots of tears, lots of very disappointed faces — to see this with smiles on our faces is amazing.”

More: Notre Dame women’s basketball advances to Elite 8 with win vs Vanderbilt

Bransford is one of just three scholarship players who returned to Notre Dame after last season. Joining her was fellow senior Cassandre Prosper and junior Hannah Hidalgo.

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The three were quickly branded by sixth-year head coach Niele Ivey as the Irish’s “core.” Hidalgo, the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Player and Defensive Player of the Year, has been one of the NCAA’s best players this season, making history as the first player of the last quarter-century to average 25-plus points, five-plus rebounds, five-plus assists and five-plus steals per game.

In Notre Dame’s 67-64 Sweet Sixteen win vs. 2-seed Vanderbilt (29-5) Friday, March 27, Hidalgo set an NCAA single-season record with 199 steals and counting. She also set an NCAA single-tournament record with 26 steals and counting.

“We didn’t do all this work just for it to be over right now,” Hidalgo said. “I was telling the girls, ‘This is not our last game playing together. We’re going to figure it out and win this game so we can be able to play a game together again.’”

More: Cassandre Prosper’s growth is why Notre Dame women’s basketball made Elite 8

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Prosper and Bransford have answered the call, too, with the former winning ACC Most Improved Player while averaging 13.9 points and 6.7 rebounds in 33.2 minutes per game. She has started all 35 games in a 25-10 season.

Although she missed 12 games due to a midseason right knee injury, Bransford has become the Irish’s spark plug off the bench. In a round of 32 upset win vs. 3-seed Ohio State, Bransford scored 10 points.

Ivey has won 71 of Notre Dame’s 78 wins in the NCAA Tournament. She won the 2001 national championship as the starting point guard and served as an assistant coach for the 2018 national champs, but securing her first Sweet Sixteen victory in five tries as a head coach felt like a career-defining win.

“I love this program; I pour into these kids,” Ivey said. “It means more to me, because I went here — I walked in their shoes. So, I want them to experience what I experienced.”

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