The Elite Eight field is complete, and the biggest question among the No. 1 seeds is how USC can survive Monday's matchup with UConn without star guard JuJu Watkins. The sophomore left the court after injuring her right leg against Mississippi Sate, and tests revealed an ACL tear in her right knee.
Even without their star player, the Trojans were able to hold off Kansas State, 67-61, to advance to the quarterfinals, as they did a year ago before being ousted by UConn in a hard-fought game. And the Trojans will face the Huskies again with a trip to the Final Four on the line. The other three matchups will be UCLA-LSU, South Carolina-Duke and Texas-TCU.
Since the tournament expanded in 1994, a No. 1 seed has won the title 23 times. Meanwhile, No. 2 seeds have won the championship four times and No. 3 seeds three times -- with the most recent being LSU in 2023, a program that is once again a No. 3 seed this year and competing in its third consecutive Sweet 16.
Perhaps the most dangerous No. 2 seed this year is, unsurprisingly, UConn -- the winningest program in women's basketball history with 11 national titles. Geno Auriemma's team advanced to its 31st consecutive Sweet 16 after Paige Bueckers tied a career-high 34 points against South Dakota State in a dominant 91-57 victory. The Huskies have not won a trophy since 2016, but they have been to 15 of the last 16 Final Fours.
Below you will find a viewable/printable 2025 Women's NCAA Tournament bracket. Thanks for stopping by, but don't forget to continue to checking in throughout the next few weeks. CBS Sports will offer complete coverage of the events with the latest news, results and breakdowns of the biggest matchups. As usual, we'll have a variety of methods in which you can see how your picks are doing on our Bracket Games on the device of your choice.
Click here to enlarge and print the blank 2025 NCAA Women's Tournament bracket