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Finding Washington Huskies’ Fifth Starter (Part 3): UW’s Best Starting Lineup Combinations in 2026–27

by Nesto Roland
May 9, 2026
in #UDUBWBB
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Finding Washington Huskies’ Fifth Starter (Part 3): UW’s Best Starting Lineup Combinations in 2026–27

Best Starting Lineup Combinations for Washington in 2026–27

Washington’s rotation is deeper and more versatile than any season in the Tina Langley era. With four starters locked in — Sayvia Sellers, Avery Howell, Brynn McGaughy, and Tilda Trygger — the fifth spot becomes the variable that changes how UW plays.

Below are the five best starting lineup combinations for the Dawgs, each built around one of the fifth‑starter candidates.

1. The “Matchup‑Proof” Lineup

Sellers – Howell – Carroll – McGaughy – Trygger

Why it works: This is Washington’s most balanced, modern lineup. Kaelyn Carroll’s 6’3″ frame gives UW a true switchable wing who can guard 2 through 4, hit open threes, and provide length that the Huskies haven’t had in years.

KAELYN KK CARROLL

Identity:

  • Long, versatile, and defensively tough

  • Excellent rebounding at all five spots

  • Balanced scoring with spacing around Sellers and Howell

Best against:

  • Big Ten teams with size on the wings

  • Physical, half‑court opponents

  • Tournament‑style matchups where versatility wins

Ceiling: This is the lineup that potentially gives Washington Sweet 16 (and beyond) upside, if Carroll pops.

2. The “Pressure Cooker” Lineup

Sellers – Carlson – Howell – McGaughy – Trygger

Why it works: Brooke Carlson adds downhill scoring and aggressiveness. This lineup puts two aggressive guards, Sellers and Carlson, on the floor who can collapse defenses by attacking the paint and create defensive rotation chaos.

BROOKE CARLSON

Identity:

  • Paint pressure

  • Toughness

  • Tempo control

  • More dribble creation than any other lineup

Best against:

  • Teams that struggle containing dribble penetration

  • Opponents who overplay Howell on the perimeter

  • Games where Sellers needs a secondary creator

Ceiling: This is the lineup that can steal momentum and flip games with energy.

3. The “3-Ball Air Raid” Lineup

Sellers – Howell – Huard – McGaughy – Trygger

Why it works: If Washington wants to maximize shooting gravity, this is the lineup. Macey Huard’s presence forces defenses to stay glued to her and (along with Howell and Trygger) opens the floor for Sellers’ drives and McGaughy’s face‑up game.

MACEY HUARD

Identity:

  • Maximum spacing

  • High‑efficiency shot profile

  • Clean driving lanes

  • Ideal for Sellers‑Trygger pick‑and‑roll

Best against:

  • Teams that pack the paint

  • Opponents who struggle to chase shooters

  • Situations where UW needs quick scoring bursts

Ceiling: This lineup can blow games open with three‑point runs.

4. The “Strategic Command” Lineup

Sellers – Howell – Coppinger – McGaughy – Trygger

Why it works: Devin Coppinger is the glue piece. She defends, moves the ball, makes the right reads, and doesn’t need touches to impact the game. This lineup has the highest “trust factor” emphasizing experience, stability and high basketball IQ.

DEVIN COPPINGER

Identity:

  • Smart, connected basketball

  • Strong defensive rotations

  • Low‑mistake offense

  • High floor, steady tempo

Best against:

  • Disciplined, structured teams

  • Games where UW needs poise

  • Situations where turnovers must be minimized

Ceiling: This is the lineup that wins close games in February.

 

5. The “Grind & Pound” Lineup

Sellers – Howell – Cain – McGaughy – Trygger

Why it works: Nina Cain’s size and tough physicality on both offense and defense combined with the toughness of UW’s “Big Four” gives the Huskies an ability to play grind it out basketball and control tempo against physical opponents.

NINA CAIN

Identity:

  • Physicality at both ends of the court

  • Strong defensive rotations

  • Grind it out offense w/ steady controlled tempo and points-in-the-paint

  • Tough rebounding to limit opponent’s second chance opportunities

Best against:

  • Games against slow tempo teams where UW needs to win a low-possessions contest

  • Situations where paint points must be maximized

  • Finesse teams that struggle executing in prolonged halfcourt defense or offense

Ceiling: This is the “grind and pound” lineup that can win games with a deliberate controlled tempo.

Which Lineup Should Start?

It depends on what Tina Langley values most:

  • Higher upside + versatility → Carroll lineup

  • More playmakers + more paint pressure → Carlson lineup

  • Spacing + scoring bursts → Huard lineup

  • Stability + two‑way balance → Coppinger lineup

  • More physicality + deliberate controlled tempo → Nina Cain lineup

The beauty of this roster is that Washington doesn’t have to choose just one. They can toggle identities depending on opponent, matchup, and game flow.

And that’s what makes the 2026–27 Huskies so intriguing: for the first time in years, Washington can win in multiple ways.


GO DAWGS!

 

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