logo
Who Dawn Staley is recruiting for South Carolina women's basketball 2026 class

Who Dawn Staley is recruiting for South Carolina women's basketball 2026 class

Yahoo07-05-2025

COLUMBIA — South Carolina women's basketball's roster is seemingly set for the 2025-26 season.
Coach Dawn Staley and the Gamecocks lost five players via the portal and to the WNBA, and gained four for 2025-26, but when next season ends they're set to lose even more talent.
Advertisement
South Carolina's Chloe Kitts, Raven Johnson, Ta'Niya Latson, Maryam Dauda, Ashlyn Watkins and Madina Okot will all be out of eligibility. It's not confirmed whether Watkins will get a medical redshirt season or not.
Staley will return Ayla McDowell, Agot Makeer, Tessa Johnson, Adhel Tac, Maddy McDaniel and Joyce Edwards for 2026-27, depending on who enters the portal.
Given the major gaps to fill, Staley has been recruiting and watching high school basketball so far this offseason. She was at an AAU event hosted by Select Events Basketball in Manheim, Pennsylvania, from April 25-27.
She could use depth in every position after next season but here's a list of names to keep an eye on.
Advertisement
ESPN does not have anyone in its top 60 players in the class of 2026 from South Carolina.
Oliviyah Edwards, forward
Oliviyah Edwards is from Tacoma, Washington, and plays high school basketball for Elite Sports Academy. The 6-foot-3 five-star forward is the No. 4 ranked player in ESPN's HoopGurlz rankings for the class of 2026.
Edwards is already somewhat familiar with Columbia, as she was on campus in January ahead of the Gamecocks' game against LSU and was seen at practice the day before the win.
She had 23 points and seven rebounds in an AAU game in Rock Hill, South Carolina, on April 26.
While it's still a mystery where McDowell, a small forward, and Makeer, a wing will play this season, losing Kitts and Watkins is more than enough reason to recruit Edwards hard. She can join the other Edwards (Joyce), in the paint.
Advertisement
Depth at forward has always been Staley's specialty, and she has the tools in Columbia to turn a great high school forward into a pro. So she may go hard for Edwards as she's developing in her senior high school season.
Jordyn Jackson, guard
Jordyn Jackson is a 6-1 guard from Washington, DC, who is No. 8 in the class of 2026 rankings. The five-star guard plays for Sidwell Friends High School and was named the 2024-25 Gatorade District of Columbia Girls Basketball Player of the Year.
On Jan. 31, she announced her final six schools are: South Carolina, TCU, Ohio State, Miami, Maryland and Alabama.
Advertisement
Although Tessa Johnson will return, and Makeer can play a guard role, recruiting a true guard should be a priority for Staley. She brings height like Johnson does, and can balance out the guard room, giving some different play style than McDaniel brings as the true point.
Kate Harpring, point guard
Kate Harpring is No. 2 in ESPN's rankings and is a five-star 5-foot-10 point guard.
She's from Atlanta, Georgia and plays for Marist School. She is the daughter of former NBA star Matt Harpring, who played for the Utah Jazz and Orlando Magic after playing at Georgia Tech.
She was named Georgia's Gatorade Player of the Year, averaging 32.2 points, 10.6 rebounds, 5.1 steals and 3.7 assists.
Advertisement
She can not only run the point but she's a dominant scorer, which Staley will lose when Latson leaves for the WNBA.
On July 17, she announced she received an offer from South Carolina then she posted a picture on an unofficial visit in November. She's also taken unofficial visits to Duke, Southern Cal, Notre Dame, North Carolina and UCLA.
McKenna Woliczko, wing
McKenna Woliczko, a five-star 6-foot-2 wing and the No. 6 ranked player, posted a picture from an unofficial visit on X as South Carolina faced Texas in the Final Four: "Good luck today in @WFinalFour @GamecockWBB #uncommitted."
She then reposted a post on April 20 that said she's expected to narrow down her top 10 this summer, with pictures of her in South Carolina, Iowa and Ohio State jerseys.
Advertisement
She is from San Jose, California, and plays for Archbishop Mitty.
Brooklyn Hall, forward
Brooklyn Hall is the younger sister of Bree Hall, who won two national titles with South Carolina before getting drafted into the WNBA on April 14. Brooklyn is a 6-foot forward and a four-star player who is ranked No. 57.
Hall averaged 18.1 points for Western Reserve Academy.
NEXT SEASON: Predicting Dawn Staley's starting lineup for South Carolina women's basketball in 2025-26
Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at lkesin@gannett.com and follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, @Lulukesin
This article originally appeared on Greenville News: Dawn Staley recruiting targets for South Carolina basketball in 2026

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Will small-market Finals bother the NBA? Not necessarily. 'This is the league's future here'
Will small-market Finals bother the NBA? Not necessarily. 'This is the league's future here'

Indianapolis Star

timean hour ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Will small-market Finals bother the NBA? Not necessarily. 'This is the league's future here'

OKLAHOMA CITY – Big stars. Small markets. That's been the verdict on these NBA Finals since the Pacers closed out the Eastern Conference playoffs over the weekend and sealed their place opposite Oklahoma City in this year's NBA Finals. And in the most basic telling, that is an accurate summation of the forthcoming series. But the public's (and the media's) love of easily digestible Nielsen ratings and viewership numbers glosses over what is in many ways a more nuanced discussion. Will Indianapolis and Oklahoma City make for a less commercially successful Finals? Not necessarily. It's important to acknowledge upfront there is some truth to the basic maxims of the TV-market discussion. In most cases, yes, pulling a major audience share like New York, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles or even Dallas-Fort Worth makes for a better-watched series. That just doesn't paint a full picture, according to Patrick Crakes, a former senior vice president at Fox Sports who now runs his own media consulting firm. 'The NBA Finals is a national event. It's better to have a base from big-market teams, from a mass of viewing, but the whole ecosystem is much more complicated than that,' Crakes said. Think of a television distribution deal as an ecosystem serving three key constituencies: The league (the rights seller), the carriers (Turner Sports, ESPN, etc.) and the distributors (Comcast, DirecTV, YouTube TV, etc.). Those constituencies are concerned with their own self-interests, yes, but in many cases, those interests overlap or align. These deals are also negotiated as large packages, with inventory (games) from the regular and postseasons all bundled together. ESPN/ABC did not secure the rights solely to these Finals. The money culled from the Finals is just a portion of the overall measure of the commercial success of the deal in a fiscal year. Per Crakes, advertising often constitutes approximately 20-30% of the overall financial pie, a meaningful number but not a decisive one. And much of that income that's attached to the playoffs is derived not from the showpiece Finals, but from the early rounds, where TV partners broadcast the largest sheer quantity of games. Yes, bigger markets in later rounds makes a difference, but sometimes not as much of one as a busy, engaging start to the postseason. Good, long series in rounds one and two will fill the advertising-dollars bucket long before the Finals. Short, uncompelling sweeps can leave a hole no big-city viewership or last-minute dramatics will fill. 'Postseason economics, a lot of it gets determined by the first couple rounds. That's where all the inventory is,' Crakes said. There are also headwinds untethered to a market share, or an individual sport's popularity. The rapidly fragmenting viewer ecosystem has prompted small dips in ratings for even America's most popular sports. Consumers no longer need easier-to-quantify access points to live sports like traditional carriers (Comcast, DirecTV, and so forth), with cord cutters eating into wider TV share. More fans come to games via social media, be it through highlights, real-time updates or other links back to the games themselves. There is an extent to which these Finals will be impacted by shifting viewer habits no matter the markets involved, whether it's No. 1 New York, No. 25 Indianapolis or No. 47 Oklahoma City (per SportsMediaWatch). Which circles back to one of Crakes' basic points: The Finals can also appeal across a wider base irrespective of market size. 'If you think about a total package of how NBA rights work,' Crakes said, 'it's important to keep in mind that small-market finals, like what we're about to see, that feature some of the game's best young players, that are going to be around for the next 15 years, being showcased, is not a bad thing for the league.' Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's star turn this season has included a scoring title, his first-career MVP nod and a center-stage role for the winningest team in the NBA. There has been perhaps no more compelling individual storyline in these playoffs — certainly in the Eastern Conference — than Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton's ascension into the elite tier of the league's guards. Around them orbit meaningful subplots (Jalen Williams' remarkable year, Pascal Siakam's impact in Indy, the dynamism presented by Indiana's backcourt depth, Chet Holmgren's continued development). The sport by nature puts fewer players on the floor, offering a bright spotlight to its stars. And unlike in football or baseball, those stars are often involved in games for long stretches, unfettered by offense-defense swaps or at-bat limits. In many ways it's easier to sell stars in the NBA, so long as they deliver their best. Whether the uniforms they wear say New York, Indiana or OKC, compelling performances from those players will go a long way toward determining the commercial success of the series upcoming. 'This is the league's future here,' Crakes said. 'The Thunder are fantastic. If the Pacers give them a series, my guess is everybody gets interested, even in New York and L.A., and it carries along just fine.' Which leads into the most fundamental determining factor in this discussion: The series has to entertain. Crakes worked at Fox Sports in October 2000, when the Yankees and Mets delivered their famed 'Subway Series." Top to bottom, the company was energized by the prospect of capturing a compelling championship dominating the country's biggest market. Instead, despite the fact that every game was decided by one or two runs, national interest never materialized. The favored Yankees eased to a 4-1 series win in front of a national audience that delivered what was at that time the lowest-rated World Series in history. 'The thing was a giant dud, because the rest of the America (wasn't interested),' Crakes said. 'You can be the dog that caught the car when you wish for these things.' Which means, of course, the same can be said in the opposite direction. Oklahoma City and Indiana have been, across the season's final months, arguably the two best teams in the NBA. Their records since Jan. 1 are first (Thunder) and fourth (Pacers) in the NBA. The Thunder finished with the league's best record and, while Indiana's path might have been smoothed slightly by Boston's bow-out, by almost any measure the Pacers have been playing championship-level basketball for five months. If that continues in this series — if Indiana can stand toe-to-toe with Oklahoma City and turn this into a six- or seven-game series — it will drive viewership everywhere. Likewise, an uneventful series decided in five games or fewer wouldn't do well, regardless. 'The real component in how successful something like this is, is a seven-game series,' Crakes said. 'That's where the gold is. Game 6, Game 7, and if we get to that with this series, this Finals will do just fine.' Of course, there's an extent to which the Finals will own the airwaves anyway. With football in hibernation, and baseball entering its summer dog days, the NBA Finals are virtually always a ratings winner. Crakes pointed out there can be long-term benefits for the league in small-market success. The last decade has seen Cleveland, Toronto, Denver and Milwaukee all win the NBA championship, strengthening the league's exposure in those markets and suggesting efforts to even the playing field between big- and small-market teams are paying dividends. 'The system's working. The small-market teams are figuring out ways to compete with the big-market teams,' Crakes said. 'This is an opportunity for these smaller markets to continue to have a deeper relationship with the NBA.' As with so much in sports, the impact of this series will be determined foremost by what the NBA makes of it. Does Oklahoma City complete a season of dominance? Do the league's two best teams at this time of year deliver a compelling Finals? Does this mark the transcendent moment for one of the NBA's young stars? All those things can, in the long term, matter as much as raw viewer data. The tendency to compare across years is reflexive. The sport's ownership of the national stage at this point in the annual calendar, though, is undeniable. 'This is going to be a gigantic number,' Crakes said. 'It's going to rate better than anything else, probably anything else at this point in the summer, and the economics are already largely in the bank.'

Jason Kelce Turns Heads With Personal Announcement on Wednesday
Jason Kelce Turns Heads With Personal Announcement on Wednesday

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Jason Kelce Turns Heads With Personal Announcement on Wednesday

Jason Kelce Turns Heads With Personal Announcement on Wednesday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Jason Kelce has been active during retirement, working through various business ventures in the television, entertainment and brewing scenes. Advertisement After playing 13 seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles, Kelce accepted a role as a broadcaster on ESPN's "Monday Night Countdown." He's also an investor and brand ambassador for Garage Beer and Underdog Apparel. Kelce also recently announced that "Beer Bowl is back," getting fans hyped for the third year of the $50K grand prize. "Beer Bowl is back ladies and gentlemen, look forward to seeing this years competitors!" Kelce said. "As with the previous two years, the winning team will receive 50K. May the best degenerates win." Upon the release of the announcement, some fans took to social media, sharing their thoughts on Jason Kelce's latest news. Advertisement "Can't wait to see clips from it," said one fan. "Let's gooooo," said another fan. "Let's goooooo," mentioned someone else. "Such a great episode today!!! Shaq is the black Kelce fantastic show with great stories," commented another. "May the best DEGENERATES win," chimed in another. "Degenerates .. lmao," added someone else. Former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Lee-Imagn Images Jason Kelce explained the Beer Bowl upon the release of the announcement, mentioning that he's partnered with the Eagles Austin Foundation. "Beer Bowl is back," Kelce said. "For those of you that don't know what Beer Bowl is, every year me and the Eagles Autism Foundation and a bunch of Eagles go and do an event down at the shore on Wednesday, a guest bar-tending event. Well we started doing an event on Thursday called Beer Bowl that has been associated with this podcast... We need teams to be submitted. Beer Bowl will be held on Thursday, June 26. We need 92 percenters to send us your team submission videos." Advertisement Related: Patrick Mahomes Turns Heads with Personal Announcement on Sunday Related: Patrick Mahomes Had No Words for Brittany Mahomes' New Post on Sunday This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 5, 2025, where it first appeared.

Chris Finch Hints Anthony Edwards Needs To Learn From Shai Gilgeous-Alexander How To Draw More Fouls
Chris Finch Hints Anthony Edwards Needs To Learn From Shai Gilgeous-Alexander How To Draw More Fouls

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Chris Finch Hints Anthony Edwards Needs To Learn From Shai Gilgeous-Alexander How To Draw More Fouls

Chris Finch Hints Anthony Edwards Needs To Learn From Shai Gilgeous-Alexander How To Draw More Fouls originally appeared on Fadeaway World. The Oklahoma City Thunder dismantled the Minnesota Timberwolves in Game 5 by 30 points (124-94) as they proceeded to the NBA Finals after beating them 4-1 in the series. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, while averaging 10.2 free throw attempts per game in this series, won the Magic Johnson Western Conference Finals MVP Award. Advertisement His free-throw shooting has come under scrutiny after the NBA world was baffled by his ability to draw fouls and get to the free-throw line. Following the Timberwolves' embarrassing exit from the Playoffs, their head coach, Chris Finch, spoke to the media about Anthony Edwards' developmental arc and the lessons he needs to learn from this experience in the Playoffs. 'I think for areas of improvement for him is just going to be along I think the game route, really. I think he's got to also kind of figure out a bit of a closing package, and we have to help him there. You know what shots and places on the floor can he repeatedly get to." He also spoke about how Edwards needs to learn how to draw more fouls, seemingly as a subtle shot at the reigning MVP, Gilgeous-Alexander. 'Foul drawing. I think you see right now in the league, like you know, you see what gets rewarded, and you know you need to kind of lean into that a little bit. Even though it's not necessarily how he likes to play but it seems to be effective, so I think it's a little bit more about a kind of grey matter than it is any kind of you know, of course, adding some skill is always important.' Advertisement In comparison, Edwards averaged 6.3 free-throw attempts per game in the regular season, as opposed to Gilgeous-Alexander's 8.8 attempts. They approximately maintained similar averages in the postseason. Two years ago, in 2022-23, Gilgeous-Alexander averaged 10.9 free-throw attempts per game, nearly twice of Edwards' attempts per game. Once Gilgeous-Alexander took this leap from averaging seven free throws a game to over nine, his scoring jumped from mid-20s to consistently 30 points per game. If Edwards figures out how to draw fouls like Gilgeous-Alexander, his offensive skill set will become several times more lethal, and the Timberwolves could break their Western Conference Finals curse (losing two years in a row) next season to become genuine title contenders. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Ends Anthony Edwards' Dream Playoff Run Anthony Edwards led the Timberwolves to one of their strongest Playoff starts in recent history. They ended both their Playoff series in five games while beating teams with the likes of LeBron James (Lakers) and Stephen Curry (Warriors), players whom Edwards grew up watching. Advertisement Therefore, the Timberwolves were widely the favorites to win this series, seeing Edwards and Randle's momentum. They also made it to the Western Conference Finals last season but fell short to the Mavericks. So, experts and legends like Magic Johnson favored them to win due to their experience at this stage. However, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder had other plans. Gilgeous-Alexander averaged 31.4 points, 8.2 assists, and 5.2 rebounds in this five-game series to end the Timberwolves' championship ambitions. Related: "Work My Butt Off This Summer": Anthony Edwards Reacts To Embarrassing Game 5 Loss Against Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder This story was originally reported by Fadeaway World on May 30, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store