USC women’s basketball head coach Lindsay Gottlieb isn’t holding back about her frustration with the NCAA Tournament selection process. After leading the Trojans to an impressive season, Gottlieb felt her team had done enough to secure a No. 1 seed, only to be placed as a No. 2—a decision she sees as a major sign of disrespect.
“This team earned it,” Gottlieb said in a post-selection interview. “We did everything that was asked of us—beat top-ranked opponents, dominated in our conference, and proved we belong among the best. For us to be overlooked? I don’t understand it.”
The snub has fueled debate among analysts and fans alike. USC boasted one of the most balanced teams in the country, led by star freshman JuJu Watkins, whose scoring dominance put her in National Player of the Year conversations. They also held their own against some of the nation’s toughest programs, securing marquee wins that many believed should have locked in a top seed.
So, why did the selection committee go another direction? Some speculate that conference bias, strength of schedule concerns, or even politics within the selection process played a role. Others argue that a late-season loss may have hurt USC’s case at the worst possible time.
Regardless, Gottlieb and her team aren’t dwelling on the snub—they’re using it as fuel. “We’re not backing down,” she said. “If we have to prove we’re the best team the hard way, we will.”
With March Madness now in full swing, the Trojans have a point to prove—and if Gottlieb’s fire is any indication, they might just make the selection committee regret their decision.