For its recent standards, Pac-12 womens basketball had a "down" year in 2021-22. Coming off a spring of 2021 that saw two of its institutions wind up in the national championship game, a 2022 NCAA tournament featuring just one Pac-12 team surviving the opening weekend and making it to the Final Four felt like a letdown by comparison.
Considering which hotshot 18-year-olds are entering the Conference of Champions, however, there is plenty of potential for future NCAA Tournaments to have a 2021 feel to them.
With the top two recruits and seven of the top 10 according to the 2022 espnW HoopGurlz recruiting rankings selecting Pac-12 schools, the conference is seeing an unprecedented influx of talent. Five Pac-12 teams have landed top-10 recruiting classes nationally, including the top three, something that hasnt happened in the last 15 years, according to conference research.
"I think its great. I think it obviously shows that the recruits are really smart because if I was in high school, I would want to play in the Pac-12," Oregon head coach
Kelly Graves
said at Pac-12 Womens Basketball Media Day. "Great coaching in this league, a conference that really cares about womens basketball, and...a rising tide lifts all ships, right? They want to play against the best, so thats why theyre coming out here."
Leading the way is UCLA, with head coach
Cori Close
reeling in four top-50 recruits, including 2nd-ranked recruit
Kiki Rice
, a 5-11 point guard who is lethal in transition and can get downhill, and
Gabriela Jaquez
, another top-20 prospect who is also the younger sister of UCLA mens basketball star forward
Jaime Jaquez
.
Close is no stranger to nabbing prized high-schoolers, having also hauled in the No. 1 recruiting class in 2014 that featured future WNBA players
Jordin Canada
and
Monique Billings
. Close says the experience of coaching that class she admits to overscheduling too soon in the careers of Canada and Billings has helped her with this class, which is already making sizable contributions in preseason practices.
"They have a great balance of unshakable confidence and competitive spirit. I dont think theyre afraid to step into whatever role is going to help our team win," Close said at Pac-12 Womens Basketball Media Day. "It has not been easy, it has not been a walk in the park for them, and at the same time, they are making an impact."
Coming off a disappointing first-round upset in last years Big Dance, Oregon was able to wipe its tears away with the No. 2 class in the country. Its a group that features four top-100 recruits and two McDonalds All-Americans in guard
Chance Gray
and forward
Grace VanSlooten
.
Just behind the Ducks are their rivals in Corvallis. McDonalds All-Americans and top-10 recruits
Timea Gardiner
and
Raegan Beers
propelled Oregon State to the third-ranked recruiting class in the country, a welcome sight for a Beaver squad that is looking to get back to where it rightfully belongs in the NCAA Tournament following a WNIT appearance last spring.
Apparently nabbing the No. 1 recruit 6-7 post
Lauren Betts
and another top-20 player in 5-9 guard
Indya Nivar
was only good enough for
Tara VanDerveer
to land the fifth-best recruiting class in the country over at Stanford.
Oh, and how does it feel to have the eighth best class in the country but just fifth best in your own conference, Arizona?
For a conference that has featured half of its teams make at least one Final Four since 2013 and regularly sends half of its squads to the NCAA Tournament, it looks like those Pac-12 trends wont be slowing down any time soon, especially with the national recognition the conference gets.
"There have been so many great players that have played in the Pac-12. What Ive said over and over is weve always had great teams, great universities, great coaches," VanDerveer said. "The difference has been people have seen our teams playThe support that we get fromjust being on television, Pac-12 Networks has put Pac-12 womens basketball on the map. We were always good but now people know about it."