UCLA Women's Basketball Lands TCU Guard Donovyn Hunter Through Transfer Portal
UCLA's women's basketball program continued to reshape its roster Monday, securing a commitment from former TCU guard Donovyn Hunter through the transfer portal. With one year of eligibility remaining, Hunter becomes the third player to join the Bruins via the portal this offseason, according to On3's Talia Goodman.
Hunter arrives in Westwood off a strong season with the Horned Frogs, having averaged 10.2 points, 3.2 rebounds, and 2.1 assists per game while starting all 38 contests she appeared in. Perhaps most impressive were her shooting numbers — she posted career highs of 45.7 percent from the field and 33.7 percent from three-point range, a significant step forward from her earlier seasons and a sign of genuine development as a scorer.
She was also a key figure in TCU's deepest tournament run in recent memory. The Horned Frogs reached the Elite Eight this year, where they were eventually eliminated by South Carolina, and Hunter's consistent production on both ends of the floor was central to getting them there.
Hunter's path to UCLA adds yet another layer to what has become a fascinating roster-building story in Westwood. The program, which won a national championship with a squad famously built from former Pac-12 programs, has drawn on familiar regional ties in its reconstruction efforts.
Hunter began her college career at Oregon State, where she started 34 of 35 games as a freshman point guard and earned a spot on the Pac-12 All-Freshman team along with honorable mention on the All-Defensive team. That season, she and then-sophomore Timea Gardiner helped lead the Beavers to the Elite Eight for the first time since 2018. The two players will now be reunited at UCLA, where Gardiner is part of the current roster after redshirting this season.
The Pac-12 connection is something the Bruins have leaned into openly. After winning the Big Ten Tournament title in March, guard Charlisse Leger-Walker — herself a transfer from Washington State — described the group as the 'Pac-12 Avengers,' a label that resonated instantly given how many of the title-winning core came from programs in the now-dissolved conference.
With Hunter joining that group, UCLA's identity heading into next season is beginning to take shape. The Bruins are banking on experienced, battle-tested talent — players who have been through the pressure of deep tournament runs — as the foundation for what they hope will be a sustained title contender.
For Hunter, the move represents a chance to chase a championship in her final season while reuniting with a former teammate. For UCLA, it's one more piece added to a roster built on ambition and Pac-12 pedigree.
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