USF football isn't the only team on campus that has a recent commitment, as the women's basketball team picked up a commitment in the form of Wyoming forward Tereza Vitulová on Thursday afternoon. She'll fill the scholarship left by wing player Enna Pehadzic, who just announced her intention to transfer to Vanderbilt on Saturday.

Vitulová, a Domasov, Czech Republic native continues the long line of international players that head coach Jose Fernandez has brought into the program. She becomes the second player from the Czech Republic on the Bulls' roster, re-uniting with Kristyna Brabencova, as the pair play on the Czech U20 National Team.

After playing a bench role in her freshman year of 2018-19, Vitulová started all 29 of the games she played in in 2019-20 and was a star for the Cowgirls, leading the team in scoring at 14.2 per game and rebound with 5.6 boards per game. Her scoring total was good for tenth in the Mountain West and she held the top field goal percentage in the conference at 54.8%. And although she didn't meet the requirements to qualify in free throw percentage, Vitulová's mark would have for second in the Mountain West at 85.1% (40-of-47).

She poured in 20 points six times on the season and posted a career-best 30 on 11-of-18 shooting against San Diego State in January. Vitulová scored in double figures in 22 of 29 played games and earned all-Mountain West honors for the first time.

In addition to Vitulová, USF also added St. Thomas Aquinas' (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) Angelee Rodriguez to the program in November to replace one outgoing senior in Tamara Henshaw.

Vitulová should quickly become one of the featured scorers that USF has and should pair nicely with double-double machine Bethy Mununga at the forward spot. The 6-foot-2 junior will also be able to be a reliable threat from three-point land, where she shot over 40% for the Cowgirls last season. Her familiarity with Brabencova could make the duo one of the best one-two punches in the American Athletic Conference, which looks to be wide open after the departure of UConn to the Big East.

Fernandez should have one scholarship left to use for the recruiting cycle after the midseason departure of Latvian standout Luize Septe.

USF finished 19-13 and was likely a safe pick for the WNIT before all postseason tournaments were canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. The Bulls knocked off No. 15 Texas and hung around with defending national champion Baylor to earn a national ranking in the early part of the season. A 10-6 record in AAC play earned USF a No. 4 seed in the conference tournament, netting it a first-round bye and the right to play Tulane, which beat Tulsa in the opening round of the tournament. The Bulls beat the Green Wave before falling to top-seeded UConn in the conference tournament semifinals.