* University of Wyoming press release

LARAMIE -- The Wyoming Cowgirl basketball team has announced its 2022-23 non-conference slate. The schedule includes 11 regular season contests and a pair of exhibitions under first-year head coach Heather Ezell.

Wyoming opens with a pair of home exhibitions as it hosts Colorado Christian October 28 and Sioux Falls Nov. 5.

7220 Sports logo
Get our free mobile app

The Cowgirls will open the season on the road for the first time since 2009 as they face North Dakota, Nov. 11. The Nov. 15 game against Gonzaga will be the fourth-straight season the Cowgirls and Lady Bulldogs will meet and is the first of six regular season non-conference contests at home for the Cowgirls.

MORE UW FOOTBALL NEWS:

Father's murder motivates Josh Cobbs to become Wyoming's top WR

Wyoming's new defensive tackles coach shacking up in the dorms

Pokes Practice Report: Defense takes center stage

Will any true freshmen see the field this fall in Laramie?

 

The contest begins a three-game homestand for UW that includes Denver (Nov. 18) and Regis (Nov. 22). It will be the 16th consecutive season that Wyoming will face Denver, dating back to the 2007-08 season.

Next, the Cowgirls will travel to the Pacific Thanksgiving Tournament Nov. 25 and 26, where they will face Pacific and San Francisco. It marks the second-straight season the Cowgirls will participate in a Thanksgiving Weekend tournament. Following the tournament, UW will have another three-game stretch in Laramie as Montana State comes to town Dec. 2. Wyoming then plays host to New Mexico Highlands and Kansas City Dec. 5 and 11, respectively.

The Cowgirls close non-conference play with a pair of road trips where they will face Nebraska in Lincoln for the second consecutive year Dec. 18, before closing with a Dec. 20 game at Wichita State, which will finish off their home-and-home series with the Shockers.

Code Of The West: Wyoming State Code of Ethics

"The Code of the West" was declared the official state code of Wyoming, and the act was signed into law on March 3rd, 2010. Wyoming is the first state to adopt a code of ethics. The legislation chose ten ethics derived from the book "Cowboy Ethics" by James P. Owen

More From 7220 Sports