
Texas women's basketball returns home Sunday with momentum, milestones, and history all rolling in the same direction as the Longhorns tip off at 2 p.m. CT at the Moody Center, televised nationally on ESPN2.
Texas enters the weekend 16-0, matching its best start since the 2015-16 season, and continues to turn Moody Center into one of the toughest venues in the country.
The Longhorns are 10-0 at home, winners of 34 straight games in the building, and own a 59-5 all-time record there. That 34-game home streak is currently the longest active home winning streak in women's college basketball, adding extra weight to every trip opponents make to Austin.
Texas has collected five ranked wins, including a dominant 89-54 victory over No. 13 Baylor, and stands alone nationally with two wins over teams currently ranked in the AP top five.
That surge began in Las Vegas at the Players Era Championship, where the Longhorns stunned No. 3 UCLA and No. 2 South Carolina on back-to-back days, becoming the first program in at least 25 years to beat top-three opponents on consecutive days.
The run pushed Texas up to No. 2 in the AP Poll, complete with 10 first-place votes.
Everything flows through Rori Harmon, who continues to carve her name deeper into the Texas record books. Harmon recently shattered a 40-year-old assist record and now sits at 851 career helpers. She's also three steals away from moving into second place on the school's all-time steals list. Just as impressive has been her efficiency. Harmon leads the nation in assist-to-turnover ratio, recording 62 assists to only three turnovers over her last seven games and just 19 turnovers on the season.
Madison Booker recently became just the fifth player in program history to record a triple-double, posting 28 points, 10 assists, and 10 rebounds in a road win. Texas has thrived by forcing mistakes and capitalizing on them, outscoring opponents 264-51 in points off turnovers over the last eight games, while committing the fewest turnovers per game in the country.
Beyond this season, Texas continues to build for the future. The Longhorns secured the No. 1 recruiting class for 2026, the only program to sign multiple top-10 prospects, reinforcing that the current dominance is part of something much bigger.
Sunday is another chance for Texas to protect its home floor, chase history, and show why the Longhorns are firmly planted among the nation's elite.