In basketball, an assist is a pass to a teammate that directly leads to a score by field goal. The National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) Division I (D-I) assist title is awarded to the player with the highest assists per game average in a given season. While the NCAA began sponsoring women's sports in the 1981âÂÂ82 season, well after the NCAA established its current three-division alignment for competitive and governance purposes, it did not officially record assists until the 1984âÂÂ85 season.
Suzie McConnell of Penn State holds the all-time D-I record for single-season assists per game (11.8), which she accomplished in 1986âÂÂ87. She also recorded 355 assists that season, which is the second-highest single-season mark behind Gonzaga's Courtney Vandersloot, who recorded 367 in 2010âÂÂ11 while playing 6 more games than McConnell did in 1986âÂÂ87. The first woman to lead D-I in scoring and assists in the same season was Caitlin Clark for Iowa in 2021âÂÂ22; she also led in both categories in 2023âÂÂ24.
Nine players have earned multiple assist titles. LaâÂÂTerrica Dobin of Northwestern State and Clark are the only ones to have earned three titles, respectively doing so from 2002âÂÂ2004 and 2022âÂÂ2024. Six others have earned the honor in consecutive seasons: McConnell (1986, 1987), Neacole Hall of Alabama State (1988, 1989), Andrea Nagy of FIU (1994, 1995), Dalma Iványi of FIU (1998, 1999), Vandersloot (2010, 2011), and Niya Johnson of Baylor (2015, 2016). The other player with two assists titles is Tiana Mangakahia of Syracuse, who won titles in 2017 and 2021, the latter after returning from breast cancer treatment.
Only two freshmen (Tine Freil and Michelle Burden) and five sophomores (McConnell, Dobin, Claire Faucher, Mangakahia, and Clark) have led Division I in average assists. Four players born outside the United States have led Division I in assists â Freil, born in Denmark; Nagy and Iványi, both born in Hungary; and Mangakahia, born in Australia.
Schools are indicated with their current athletic brand names, which do not always match those used by a team in the relevant season.