The University of South Carolinaβs womenβs basketball team is celebrating its third NCAA Championship after defeating Iowa 87-75 in the title game. The win is a perfect end to an undefeated season under the leadership of head coach Dawn Staley, who coached an entirely new starting five to a perfect season.
Staleyβs win made her the fifth coach to win at least three national championships β part of an elite group that includes UConnβs Geno Auriemma, Tennesseeβs Pat Summitt, LSUβs Kim Mulkey and Stanfordβs Tara VanDerveer. But Staley isnβt just a great coach. She also had an impressive career as a player, with three Final Fours and one national title game appearance as a player for Virginia, five WNBA All-Star honors with the Charlotte Sting and three Olympic gold medals playing with Team USA.
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While weβre still floating on the high of South Carolinaβs storybook season, here are five things to know about the teamβs incredible coach.
Dawn Staley has been a coach at the University of South Carolina since 2008. But the Philly native, who grew up in the Raymond Rosen Projects, represents her city every chance she gets rooting for the local sports teams. You can spot her on the sidelines rocking Eagles gear.
Or hanging out at the Phillies game with Travis and Jason Kelce.
A quick scan of her Instagram account and youβll see that Coach Staley has a thing for shoes. From Jordans in her teamβs colors to colorful Air Force 1s, her sneaker game is tight, and she loves to show them off.
While most people attribute South Carolinaβs success to the teamβs hard work and strong leadership, Coach Staley makes sure to give most of the credit to a higher power.
After South Carolinaβs exciting championship win, Staley took time to thank God for the success her team has had this season.
βWe serve an unbelievable God,β she said in a tearful postgame interview.
Staley also uses faith to inspire her players. She has a meal with her team before each game where she shares a βGameday Devotionalβ which includes a a team picture and a Bible verse.
Besides being a champion for her players on the court, Staley has also been consistently outspoken on issues of civil rights. In 2020, she joined other University of South Carolina players and coaches in a campaign to remove the late South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmanβs name from the schoolβs fitness center, arguing that his stance on segregation and his opposition of the Civil Rights Act of 1957 shouldnβt be honored. And when a Black volleyball player from Duke was targeted with racial slurs from fans at Brigham Young University during a game in 2022, she canceled a two-game series against the school.
βAs a head coach, my job is to do whatβs best for my players and staff,β she said in a statement at the time. βThe incident at BYU has led me to reevaluate our home-and-home, and I donβt feel that this is the right time for us to engage in this series.β
Coach Staley doesnβt just make her team run laps and review highlight footage. Sheβs also incredibly nurturing to the members of her team, who consider her a mother figure when theyβre away from home, showing up at graduations and other important events.
βIt means a lot just to play β just to learn from her,β said guard Raven Johnson. βI go to her about everything. I could joke around with her. I could do anything, just anything. Sheβs like a mom, like a home away from home. Itβs a home-away-from-home feeling.
βI wish you guys could experience that and just how much sheβs helped me as a player and as a woman. And sheβs just amazing, man. Itβs a blessing. Just playing for her is so much fun. People just love playing for her. People would run through brick walls for her,β said guard Te-Hina Paopao.
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