Lola Donez from Hawaii to play in women’s NCAA March Madness tournament

California Golden Bears' Lola Donez
California Golden Bears' Lola Donez -
0Comments

Hawaii is being represented by one player in the NCAA women’s basketball tournament.

California will have the most players on the hard court during this year’s tournament with 161 players, followed by Texas with 152.

Lahaina is the hometown for the player from Hawaii.

Hawaii Player in 2024 NCAA Tournament

Name Team Height Position Hometown
Lola Donez California Golden Bears 5′11″ Guard Lahaina

Total Tournament Teams and Players by State

State Total Tournament Players Total Tournament Teams
California 161 11
Texas 152 11
New York 137 11
Pennsylvania 131 16
Wisconsin 125 9
Illinois 120 5
Ohio 115 4
Minnesota 104 5
New Jersey 82 4
Massachusetts 81 10
Michigan 81 8
North Carolina 74 8
Tennessee 67 6
Georgia 61 4
Virginia 57 10
Indiana 48 5
Maryland 39 2
Florida 38 7
Colorado 37 4
Iowa 36 3
Connecticut 33 6
Missouri 32 1
Washington 32 3
Kentucky 30 5
Oklahoma 29 3
South Carolina 22 4
Kansas 22 3
Alabama 21 3
Arizona 16 1
Nebraska 15 2
Arkansas 14 2
Montana 13 2
Oregon 13 2
Utah 12 1
New Hampshire 12 1
South Dakota 12 1
Maine 11 2
Nevada 10 0
West Virginia 9 2
Delaware 7 0
New Mexico 7 1
Mississippi 6 2
Alaska 5 1
Idaho 5 0
Rhode Island 5 0
Vermont 5 1
Louisiana 4 2
Wyoming 3 0
North Dakota 1 0
Hawaii 1 0


Related

Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, left, and University of Pennsylvania male swimmer Will "Lia" Thomas - State of Hawaii / Penn Athletics

Hawaii among 21 states allowing boys to join girls’ high school sports

An analysis by Aloha State News shows that, following President Donald Trump’s Feb. 5 executive order titled “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” Hawaii is one of 21 states following the order that allows biological males to play on female sports teams.

Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, left, and University of Pennsylvania male swimmer Will "Lia" Thomas - State of Hawaii / Penn Athletics

Hawaii listed as one of 21 states permitting boys in girls’ high school sports

An analysis by Aloha State News shows that, following President Donald Trump’s Feb. 5 executive order titled “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” Hawaii is one of 21 states following the order that allows biological males to play on female sports teams.

Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, left, and University of Pennsylvania male swimmer Will "Lia" Thomas - State of Hawaii / Penn Athletics

Analysis: Hawaii among 21 states that allow boys to play girls’ high school sports

An analysis by Aloha State News shows that, following President Donald Trump’s Feb. 5 executive order titled “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” Hawaii is one of 21 states following the order that allows biological males to play on female sports teams.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Aloha State News.