Home US SportsNCAAW 20 years after their lone national title, could 2025-26 be the season that Maryland breaks their championship drought?

20 years after their lone national title, could 2025-26 be the season that Maryland breaks their championship drought?

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Only three NCAA Division I women’s basketball coaches have won back-to-back national championships: UConn’s Geno Auriemma (2002-04, 2009-10, 2013-16), Tennessee’s Pat Summitt (1996-98, 2007-08) and USC’s Linda Sharp (1983-84).

Then there’s South Carolina’s Dawn Staley (2022, 2024) and Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer (1990, 1992), who have won two in three years (with Staley also capturing three in eight, beginning in 2017). Kim Mulkey waited seven years between her first and second titles at Baylor (2005, 2012), and then another seven years between her second and third Baylor titles (2019) before four seasons passed between her third and fourth championships (2023), with the final one coming at LSU.

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The legacy of Notre Dame’s Muffet McGraw stands a notch below that group because it took her a whopping 17 years after her first to win her second (2001, 2018). Still, it was all the more sweet. VanDerveer experienced a similarly sweet feeling when she won her third 29 years after her second (2021).

Is such a feeling of sweetness possible for Maryland’s Brenda Frese in 2026?

The Terrapin head coach has already waited longer than McGraw, and it’s unclear if a second national championship will follow her 2006 triumph. 19 years have passed. And each one of them has been heartbreaking.

Frese’s legacy as the greatest women’s or men’s coach ever at a proud basketball school—and one of the greatest ever overall—is nevertheless cemented because she has consistently led her program to prominence. Only once over those 19 years have the Terps missed the NCAA Tournament.

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That happened my freshman year at Maryland, which was the year after the departures of Kristi Toliver and Marissa Coleman, who, as freshmen in 2006, were two of the three best players (along with then-sophomore Crystal Langhorne) on the team that delivered the program’s lone natty.

That 2010 season is, to this day, the last time the Maryland men have achieved a higher seed than the Maryland women entering the postseason. Memories of the 2010 men’s season, such as rushing the court after Greivis Vasquez’s clutch shot to beat eventual national champion Duke, which preceded a No. 4 seed and second-round appearance in the NCAA Tournament, were quickly replaced with the arrival of Alyssa Thomas in 2010-11 and new memories of women’s basketball excellence and, at times, dominance.

But that second national title for the Terrapins has yet to come, and just as falling short stung in each of Toliver and Coleman’s remaining three years, most especially when they had one last chance as seniors and lost to Louisville in the Elite Eight, it has stung time and again.

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Those times included being overwhelmed by Auriemma’s eventual four-peat Huskies in the Sweet 16 to repeatedly seeing über-talented teams’ great chances slip away because we just didn’t play our best basketball. (That includes the time we didn’t even get the chance to try and play our best because the tournament was canceled in 2020, when we likely would have been a No. 1 seed.)

I don’t want to sound like a broken record. I’ve bemoaned the championship drought before, even during seasons when it may not have been relevant to talk about the Terps as national championship contenders.

Entering the 2025-26 season, we’re in a familiar position: Maryland is expected to be really good, beginning the season at No. 10 in the preseason AP poll, but not expected to get over that hump and compete with the legitimate title contenders. A pessimist would say, “Give it a rest! Winning a national championship is really rare, and you don’t have to point out the drought every year your team doesn’t win one. And face it, they’re probably not going to win again this year.”

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