2024–25 UConn Huskies women's basketball team

2024–25 UConn Huskies women's basketball
Big East regular season & tournament champions
Baha Mar Women's Championship champions
NCAA tournament champions
ConferenceBig East Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
APNo. 1
Record37–3 (18–0 Big East)
Head coach
Associate head coachChris Dailey (40th season)
Assistant coaches
Home arenaHarry A. Gampel Pavilion
XL Center
2024–25 Big East women's basketball standings
Conf.Overall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 1 UConn180 1.000373  .925
No. 23 Creighton162 .889267  .788
Seton Hall135 .7222310  .697
Marquette126 .6672111  .656
Villanova117 .6112115  .583
DePaul810 .4441319  .406
Providence612 .3331319  .406
St. John's513 .2781615  .516
Butler513 .2781618  .471
Georgetown414 .2221219  .387
Xavier117 .056724  .226
2025 Big East tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll

The 2024–25 UConn Huskies women's basketball team represented the University of Connecticut (UConn) during the 2024–25 NCAA Division I women's basketball season, winning the national championship. The Huskies were led by Hall of Fame head coach Geno Auriemma in his 40th season at UConn, and split their home games between Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on their campus in Storrs, Connecticut, and the XL Center in Hartford, Connecticut. UConn is a member of the Big East Conference, which it rejoined in the 2020–21 season; it had been a member of the original Big East Conference from 1979 through 2013, and one of the original women's basketball teams in that conference in 1982.

After losing two graduates to the WNBA, UConn entered the season ranked #2 in the AP and Coaches polls, returning two-time All American Paige Bueckers and several other players previously redshirted for injury, with some still unavailable at the season's start. The Huskies added a solid recruiting class, including #1 ranked recruit Sarah Strong, and also picked up Princeton graduate Kaitlyn Chen from the transfer portal.

An early season win against Fairleigh Dickinson was Auriemma's 2017th career victory, making him the winningest head coach in NCAA history. The Huskies won early non-conference games against North Carolina, Ole Miss, and Louisville, while losing against ranked Notre Dame, USC, and Tennessee. In a much anticipated February game of ranked opponents, UConn shocked home team and defending national champion South Carolina, 87–58. The Huskies continued to dominate Big East conference play, going undefeated for the second consecutive season and winning the Big East tournament. In the 2025 NCAA Division I tournament, UConn was seeded second in their regional and won their way to the national title match, defeating opponents by an average of 34 points per game. In the tournament finals, a rematch against South Carolina, the Huskies defeated the Gamecocks, 82–59, to win their 12th national championship. UConn finished the season with a record of 37–3.