Duke 2026 ACC Women's Basketball Champions
DULUTH, Ga. — Nobody said it would be easy. And Louisville made absolutely sure of that.

In one of the most gripping championship games the ACC has produced in years, the No. 1 Duke Blue Devils survived a relentless, take-no-prisoners assault from the Louisville Cardinals — escaping with a 70-65 overtime victory at Gas South Arena to win their 10th ACC Women’s Basketball Championship title. Ten. A number that now belongs to Duke and Duke alone.
But let’s be real — this one nearly slipped away.
Louisville did not come to Duluth to participate. They came to win. Armed with a rebuilt roster, a point to prove, and a fan base that showed up louder and deeper than anyone expected, the Cardinals turned this championship game into exactly the kind of brawl that makes March the greatest month in sports. They led for 35 of 45 minutes. They pushed in overtime. They had their hands on this trophy.
Duke just wouldn’t let them take it.
THE BUILDING WAS ALIVE BEFORE THE OPENING TIP
Walk into Gas South Arena before tip-off and you felt it immediately — this was not a neutral crowd. Cardinal red flooded the seats. Louisville fans came armed with life-size face cutouts of their starting five, and the noise they generated was something that had to be experienced to be believed. Duke had supporters in the building, no question — but on this day, in this building, the Cards owned the crowd.
Both sides traded chants. Both sides traded decibels. The electricity was real, the stakes were enormous, and by the time the opening tip went up, every soul inside that arena was locked in and ready.
LOUISVILLE CAME TO PLAY — AND DUKE FELT IT EARLY
The Cardinals wasted zero time making their intentions known. They won the opening tip, pushed the pace, and got on the board immediately. Duke scrambled to match the energy, and for long stretches of the first quarter, Louisville was simply the better team on the floor. Sharp passes. Contested stops. A crowd that fueled every positive possession.
Taina Mair was the one who kept Duke from falling too far behind. The Blue Devils’ engine knocked down a three early and reminded everyone in the building why she is one of the most dangerous players in the country. But even Mair’s best efforts couldn’t fully stop the bleeding in the first quarter. Louisville took a commanding 21-14 lead into the second, and the Cardinals’ sideline buzzed with belief.
That belief only grew in the second quarter — right up until it didn’t. Louisville stalled offensively, going nearly three minutes without a bucket while Duke quietly went to work. Back-to-back baskets tied the game at 21-21 with 7:10 left in the half. Suddenly the Cardinals looked unsure of themselves, plays breaking down at the worst possible moments, communication fraying under pressure. Imari Berry brought stability when Louisville needed it most, helping the Cards claw back to a 32-30 halftime lead. It was narrow. It was fragile. And both teams knew the second half was going to be everything.
THIRD QUARTER: LOUISVILLE DIGS IN, DUKE KEEPS SWINGING
Laura Ziegler came out of the locker room and immediately made a statement. Three pointer. Top of the key. Crowd lost its mind. Louisville was up five and looked like a team ready to separate — but Duke has too much pride and too much talent to simply fold. The Blue Devils dug in, kept attacking, and found their most reliable weapon: Louisville’s foul trouble.
The Cardinals kept sending Duke to the line. And Duke kept converting. It was not the kind of basketball anyone draws up, but it was effective — and it kept the Blue Devils within striking distance all the way to the third quarter buzzer. Louisville led 49-46 heading to the fourth. Three points. One possession. Wide open.
OVERTIME DRAMA: CARDINALS AND BLUE DEVILS GO BLOW-FOR-BLOW
What happened in the final ten minutes of regulation defied logic and rewarded everyone who stayed on their feet — which, by that point, was every single person in Gas South Arena.
Duke clawed back. Louisville answered. The margin shrank to two at 53-51 with under five minutes to play, and from that point forward every possession carried the weight of the entire season. Mair and Thomas refused to let Duke blink. Berry and Ziegler refused to let Louisville buckle. It was elite basketball at its most raw and honest — two teams grinding until someone broke.
Nobody broke in regulation. But the final 27 seconds produced some of the most dramatic moments the 2026 ACC Tournament has ever seen.
Riley Nelson. Three pointer. Duke leads 58-57. Gas South Arena absolutely detonated.
Mackenly Randolph answers. Louisville back up one. Berry hits one of two at the line. Louisville leads by two with 13 seconds left.
Duke advances the ball, gets to the rim, converts. Tie game. 60-60. Four point seven seconds on the clock. Louisville heaves it the length of the floor.
No good.
Overtime.
The extra session was a different game entirely. Duke took control early and never let it go. Louisville’s legs were gone and their foul issues — the one problem they could never shake all night — kept gifting the Blue Devils easy points. Duke built a 65-63 lead with 1:24 remaining and simply managed the clock with ice water in their veins.
Then Riley Nelson buried a three with five seconds left and it was over.
Duke 70. Louisville 65. Championship.
STANDOUT PERFORMERS
Duke Blue Devils
Taina Mair — 19 PTS | 12 REB | 3 AST
Delaney Thomas — 19 PTS | 9 REB | 1 AST
Ashlon Jackson — 11 PTS | 3 REB | 6 AST
Louisville Cardinals
Imari Berry — 18 PTS | 3 REB | 2 AST
Mackenly Randolph — 17 PTS | 11 REB | 6 AST
Laura Ziegler — 10 PTS | 4 REB | 1 AST
Mair was the heartbeat of this Duke team from tip to final buzzer. Nineteen points. Twelve rebounds. Three assists. A double-double on the grandest stage in the ACC — and she made it look inevitable even when nothing about this game was. Thomas was every bit her equal, matching her 19 points and adding nine boards in a performance that should have WNBA scouts — and certainly NCAA Tournament opponents — taking notes. Jackson’s six assists were the quiet glue holding everything together when Duke needed to execute most.
For Louisville, Randolph was nothing short of extraordinary. Seventeen points, eleven rebounds, six assists — a near triple-double in a championship game is the kind of stat line that demands respect regardless of the outcome. Berry was dynamic, creative, and relentless. Ziegler gave the Cardinals a timely spark when the game was there for the taking. These three deserved a different ending. They just ran into a Duke team that refused to be beaten.
THE NUMBERS BEHIND THE MADNESS
Here is the part that makes this game even more remarkable — Louisville was the better team by nearly every traditional measure for most of the night.
The Cardinals led for 35 minutes. They outscored Duke in the paint 26 to 24. Their bench delivered 20 points while Duke’s reserves managed just two. They had more fastbreak points. They won the turnover battle. By halftime, by third quarter end, by the numbers — Louisville deserved to be celebrating.
But basketball is not always fair to the team that deserves it. Duke’s 19 offensive rebounds generated 18 second-chance points. Their points-per-possession rate of 1.061 crushed Louisville’s 0.929. And when the Cardinals kept fouling — 16 opponent turnovers forced but a foul rate that kept Duke at the line all day — the Blue Devils made them pay every single time.
Championships are not always won by the team that plays the prettiest basketball. They are won by the team that executes when the lights are brightest. Duke executed. Louisville will spend the offseason wondering what might have been if they had just stayed out of foul trouble in the fourth.

WHAT COMES NEXT
Duke enters the 2026 NCAA Tournament not just as a No. 1 seed, but as a proven commodity. This team knows how to close. They know how to win ugly. They know how to hold their nerve when a season is on the line. That combination — talent plus composure — is what separates contenders from champions come March.
Louisville walks away from Duluth with something equally valuable, even if it does not come with a trophy. They proved beyond any doubt that this program is back. A rebuilt roster that pushed the ACC’s top team in overtime in the ACC Championship game is not a consolation story — it is a statement. The 2026 NCAA Tournament bracket will be released soon, and somewhere, a No. 4 or No. 5 seed is quietly dreading the possibility of drawing the Cardinals in the first round.
They should be.
Duke won the hardware. Louisville won the respect. And everyone inside Gas South Arena on this unforgettable night got to witness something truly special.
Ten ACC titles for the Blue Devils. And not a single one of them came easy.
Location: Gas South Arena, Duluth, GA | Final Score: Duke 70, Louisville 65 (OT) | 2026 ACC Women’s Basketball Championship

