ESPN’s Charlie Creme released his way-too-early Top 25 for the 2026-27 women’s basketball season, and he listed Michigan at No. 4. That would be tied for the program’s best-ever standing and labeling the Wolverines as favorites to win the Big Ten, which would mark Michigan’s first women’s basketball Big Ten title.
A large reason for the early-offseason optimism is because of the roster. The Wolverines picked up Stanford transfer forward Courtney Ogden in the portal, bolstering their team after the departure
of freshman guard McKenzie Mathurin to Missouri. Along with Ogden, who averaged 12.9 points, 4.3 rebounds and 1.1 steals per game, Michigan retained four starters from its Elite Eight lineup.
The core of junior guards Olivia Olson, Syla Swords and Mila Holloway, wings Kendall Dudley and Te’Yala Delfosse, and senior center Ashley Sofilkanich give Michigan the next-level postseason experience that primes teams to make a big jump. Beyond the current mark the group has set, tying the program’s best March Madness finish, the core came to Michigan to make history, and that means the Final Four and a Big Ten title.
“By the time it’s all said and done, they’ll probably have done more than we did, and that’s something that I’m just so proud of,” former Michigan forward Naz Hillmon said March 28 after the Wolverines’ Sweet 16 win. “I feel like, hopefully, I was a part of getting some of the girls here and to wear the Michigan across their chest, but I’m excited to see what comes next for them. And I think that when it’s all said and done, they’ll probably be the best.”
Hillmon’s group led Michigan to its first Elite Eight appearance her senior season, a mark the 2025-26 team equalled while tying a program record with 28 wins and notching the best NCAA Tournament seed at No. 2. The Wolverines set the mark for total points (2,880), scoring average (82.3 points per game) and Big Ten wins (15). In doing so, they challenged top competition in the country, facing a gauntlet of teams both in the Big Ten and in marquee non-conference matchups.
November’s home contest against Connecticut — a perennial powerhouse stacked with top recruits and reigning National Player of the Year Sarah Strong — will serve as a measuring stick for where the 2026-27 group stacks up at the start of the season. In comparison to Michigan’s narrow 72-69 loss in November, which marked the Huskies’ only single-digit victory in a 38-1 Final Four season, the Wolverines hope to etch Nov. 5, 2026 as the start of a historic season.
Most years, a victory over UConn — which arguably defined head coach Kim Barnes Arico’s tenure at St. John’s when the Red Storm ended the Huskies’ 99-game home win streak in 2012 — has the capacity to elevate a program to new heights. It brings national recognition and validation in a team’s prowess. It marks an arrival as national title contenders.
The Wolverines have been one leap away from that level, falling one win short of the NCAA Tournament’s third weekend and the Final Four. They’ve been three points shy — on two occasions in the 2025-26 season — from beating Top 2 teams. But now, armed with the experience and lessons learned from losses in those moments, Michigan is prepared to take the next step.
“I think just growing from these games and being put in this situation is really the missing piece that you said,” Olson said after the Elite Eight loss. “That’s the missing piece. Like, we needed to get here, and now we know what it’s like to be here, and we’re going to use that just to get better as a team.”
Michigan’s core group has played the minutes of veteran upperclassmen in their first two collegiate seasons. Now, they’re the experienced ones. They’re the ones who have been in every game situation imaginable, from overtime and double-overtime wins to mounting massive comebacks and withstanding opponent surges.
The Wolverines are talented, recognized with two All-Region selections in Olson and Swords, along with multiple conference honors for Olson, Swords and Holloway. Michigan has more McDonald’s All-Americans on its roster than ever before, and its personnel fits the Wolverines’ high-intensity, full-court pressure, transition-heavy, effort-based style of play.
“What coach Arico has done, has done a great job, which obviously starts with the recruiting, and she picked up some big time players,” Hillmon said. “And I think the biggest thing about picking up big time players, she’s found a way to make sure that they’re bought into “hardest working team in America,” and they continue to show that every single night, regardless of their talent. And I think that’s what’s really special about this group, is, you know, they’re playing as hard as they can every single night, regardless of their opponent, regardless of the game. And they’re really young, so to be able to see that at this age, the next couple of years, next couple games, it’s gonna be very special.”
And as senior guard Brooke Quarles Daniels said in her final podium interview for the Wolverines, “the program is going to be in great hands. I think people are getting us now, but it’s not going to be that way the next year or the second year, so you got to get us now.”
Teams have had their chance at Michigan, teaching them lessons the hard way that can only be forged through fire. But now, as ESPN’s ranking recognizes, the time to get the Wolverines is slipping away, and the 2026-27 season marks their turn to be the attackers.












