
Famous Female Athletes in The Divine Nine
Here, we celebrate some of the most iconic female athletes who proudly represent Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., and Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. These women have left lasting legacies both on and off the field, court, or track.
Famous Female Athletes in The Divine Nine was originally published on hotspotatl.com
Recently named to Delta Sigma Theta's 2025 honorary class, Cash is a three-time WNBA champion, four-time WNBA All-Star, and two-time Olympic Gold Medalist. She has also served as Senior VP of Basketball Operations & Team Development for the New Orleans Pelicans and is the Founder/CEO of She's Got Time, a lifestyle and media company focused on building holistic support systems for women in sports.
Initiated as a 2025 honorary member of Sigma Gamma Rho, Swoopes was the first player ever signed to the WNBA, becoming a 3x league MVP and being among the top 15 WNBA players of all time. Her list of accomplishments includes a WNBA championship, FIBA World Cup gold medal, three Olympic gold medals, and an NCAA championship.
An initiate of AKA's Beta Alpha chapter at FAMU, Gibson broke racial barriers by becoming the first African American to win a Grand Slam title in 1956, followed by consecutive wins at Wimbledon and the U.S. Nationals (now the U.S. Open).
Shakes-Drayton, a 2024 honorary initiate, is a retired British track & field athlete who has won a 2013 European Indoor Championship in the 400m and a gold medal in the 4x400m relay at the 2012 World Indoor Championships. She has also contributed significantly to charities such as Tommy's The Baby Charity and the GLL Sport Foundation.
Leslie, a 2021 honorary initiate of AKA, transformed women's basketball with her skill, athleticism, and leadership. She is a 2x WNBA champion, 4x Olympic gold medalist, and 3x league MVP. In fact, she's the first WNBA player to win regular season, All-Star, and finals MVP honors in a single season.
Another 2025 honorary member, Joyner-Kersee is a 6x Olympic medalist who still holds the record in heptathlon, set at the 1988 Seoul Olympics. Named the 'Greatest Female Athlete of the 20th Century' by Sports Illustrated, she showed her commitment to the community and youth development through her work with Athletes for Hope and the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Foundation.
Howard, an initiate of the Iota Mu chapter at the University of Kentucky, was drafted first overall by the Atlanta Dream in the 2022 WNBA draft. She was named WNBA's Rookie of the Year, averaging 16.8 points, 2.8 assists, and 1.6 steals in her first year. She would go on to be a 3x All-Star, a gold medalist in the 2021 FIBA AmeriCup, and a bronze medalist in 3×3 Basketball at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
A retired sprinter who competed in the 60m, 100m, and 200m, Jeter was known as the 'fastest woman alive' after running a personal best of 10.64 seconds at the 2009 Shanghai Golden Grand Prix. Winning gold at the 2012 London Olympics and three gold medals in the World Championships, she is the fourth fastest woman ever in the 100m race.
Wilson, an initiate of the Theta Gamma chapter at the University of South Carolina, had a stellar collegiate career, leading the Gamecocks to their first NCAA championship in 2017. A top pick by the Las Vegas Aces in the 2018 WNBA draft, she would go on to become a 2x WNBA champion, 3x league MVP, 7x All-Star, and 2x Olympic gold medalist.
Initiated through the Alpha Chi chapter at Tennessee State University, Rudolph was the first American woman to win three gold medals in a single Olympic Games (Rome, 1960) in track and field. Nicknamed 'The Tornado,' she overcame physical challenges such as polio and scarlet fever in her youth to become a global inspiration and a forceful advocate for women and equality.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
James Guy hopes to make a splash at another Olympic Games
James Guy is targeting a trip to the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles after admitting he has never been happier in his swimming career. The 29-year-old, a six-times Olympic medallist, will head into the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore with one eye firmly on LA and retirement currently far from his thoughts. Guy said: 'Yes, 100 per cent LA is in the plan. Obviously I'll be 32, turning 33, but I don't look like I'm going to change much in the next couple of years unless something drastically goes wrong.' A member of the Great Britain 4×200 metres freestyle team which retained its Olympic title in Paris last summer after taking gold at the 2023 World Championships in Fukuoka, Guy is one of the nation's most decorated swimmers. Asked what he still had to tick off, he replied: 'Nothing really. I would say just in terms of where I am right now, I'm the happiest I've probably ever been in terms of my swimming career. 'That's why I'm still going, obviously, back on my best again, hitting personal best times. 'I think in terms of athletes of my age, it doesn't really happen that often, so to be where I am right now, really enjoying the sport, I'll try to do for as long as I can.' The British quartet of Guy, Tom Dean, Duncan Scott and Matt Richards face stern competition for top spot on the podium in Singapore with the Americans in impressive form at their trials. They will walk out having been lauded by the crowds at Wimbledon having been invited along with their partners into the Royal Box for the middle Sunday of the tournament. Guy said: 'We had a really good day, had some great seats. The food was fantastic – we ate scones and food all day and had lunch with the chairwoman of the club. I was talking to her and she said that Tom Cruise was in my seat the day before, so it was actually really, really cool.' Asked if he and his team-mates should have been eating scones as they prepares for the World Championships, he replied with a smile: 'I know. I only had a couple. Matt had more than me – he probably didn't tell you that, did he? I had two or three.'
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Dwyane Wade breaks down how the current WNBA players are fighting for a better future: "We are in a space right now where we see the league growing in front of our eyes"
Dwyane Wade breaks down how the current WNBA players are fighting for a better future: "We are in a space right now where we see the league growing in front of our eyes" originally appeared on Basketball Network. The 2025 WNBA All-Star Game is officially in the books, and oh, boy, if there was ever a statement that this league is booming, it was made at the Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, the home of the Fever and the Pacers. Even without the nominally biggest star, Caitlin Clark, who sat out nursing a groin injury of hers, the rest of the pack, from Angel Reese and A'ja Wilson to Breanna Stewart to Kelsey Plum, made sure fans got a show. But the biggest highlight wasn't just on the court. Players used the much-awaited national spotlight to push one very important conversation forward, as they all showed up in shirts that read "Pay Us What You Owe Us." Making it clear that, as much as this was a moment to relax and showcase basketball skills, it was also a reminder that the fight for more, both money and acknowledgment, is still far from over. The WNBA is boomin' That's the story of this WNBA season, a league enjoying the glow-up while never losing sight of the battles that still need to be won. These women aren't just hooping for themselves. They're hoping for the next generation of girls who will inherit a different league than the one we're watching today. The WNBA has come a long way. Bigger TV deals, arenas that draw more spectators and growing endorsement opportunities have made the league more marketable, more competitive and, frankly, more exciting for fans. But for the players, the growth goes beyond the numbers. It's about building something that lasts. Dwyane Wade, a 13-time NBA All-Star and the minority owner of the Chicago Sky, spoke on his podcast "The Timeout" about just how important that fight is. "The one thing is, what a lot of, even us NBA players, what we don't understand when it comes to the guys before us is we always take it as hate a lot. 'Oh, the older guys that hatin' on us,' and it feels like that when you are a younger guy and the older are talking about the game or about how much money you make," Wade argued in the recent episode. "When you look at the WNBA now, they are putting on for, yes, they talkin' about themselves but ultimately knowing that some people in this league today will not get the chance to experience what the league would eventually be…" the Miami Heat icon added. "We are in a space right now where we can see a league that is growing in our eyes. We didn't see that in the NBA because by the time we watched it, it seemed like it's already grown." Fighting for a better future for the WNBA It is the point of the whole conversation about what, on the surface, looks like a desire for more money. The women dominating the WNBA today may not fully reap the rewards of what they're fighting for, but they're doing it knowing that the next generation will. And that's what makes this moment so special. The WNBA is at a rare intersection: talented enough to pull in massive audiences, bold enough to challenge the system and still young enough as a league to reinvent itself. With generational stars like Reese and Clark, alongside many voices of support for their struggle, like Wade's, are planting the seeds of a better future. And we are all there to witness it. Will it happen overnight? No. But the message coming out of All-Star weekend was clear: the current generation isn't just here to play. They're here to make sure that by the time the next wave of players steps into the league, the WNBA won't need to ask for story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jul 24, 2025, where it first appeared.

3 hours ago
Australia's swimming dominance: Small population but big results
SINGAPORE -- Australia has a relatively small population. But Australia is a giant when it comes to competitive swimming. Whether it's the Olympics, or as it is this time with the swimming world championships opening in the pool in Singapore on Sunday, Aussie swimmers grace the podium. 'We have swimming in our DNA as a country,' Rohan Taylor, Australia's head coach, told The Associated Press. 'We have to be particular and purposeful in finding the talent,' he added. "And then it's the coaching. We can't get it wrong. We get one crack at the talented athlete.' Australia won seven gold medals and 18 overall at last year's Paris Olympics, second in both categories to the United States. The United States has 340 million people, almost 13 times Australia's population of 27 million. The Americans won eight gold and 28 overall. China, No. 3 with 12 overall, won only two gold medals from a population of 1.4 billion — 52 times Australia's. Australia's women are swimming powers, led by Kaylee McKeown and Mollie O'Callaghan. Add in Moesha Johnson, who has already won the 10- and 5-kilometer open-water races in Singapore and expects to race the 800 and 1,500 in the pool. McKeown won the 100 and 200 backstroke in Paris and in Tokyo in 2021. She also won both races two years ago at the worlds in Fukuoka, Japan. O'Callaghan is the defending 200 freestyle winner for Paris. Then there's men like Kyle Chalmers, who won the 100 free at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and has piled up nine Olympics medals and 12 in world championships. 'They have done so well on the international stage — multiple times,' Taylor said. "So it's another opportunity for them to add to their CVs.' For French star Léon Marchand, the world championships mean easing off. He won four individual Olympic gold medals a year ago in Paris. The Los Angeles Olympics in 2028 are still far off. Time to swim a lighter schedule. None of that for Canadian Summer McIntosh. She won three individual gold medals in Paris, but will go for five in Singapore, a test run for her program in Los Angeles. These worlds, a year after the Olympics, feature swimmers in their prime, older swimmers who want to see if they can make it to LA, and young swimmers making their debut. Another worlds is set for 2027 in Budapest, Hungary — the final proving ground before the 2028 Olympics. Marchand is expected to race only the 200 and 400 individual medley races in Singapore, dropping the 200 breaststroke and 200 butterfly. He won gold in all four in Paris, but wants to be fresh from the two IM races and world-record shots. In Singapore, McIntosh will go in the two IMs, the 200 fly, and the 400 and 800 freestyle. She did not swim the 800 free in Paris. This time she will, which sets up a showdown with American superstar Katie Ledecky — maybe the most anticipated race of the worlds. The eight gold medals that U.S. swimmers won to top the Paris standings was their lowest victory total at the Olympics since the 1988 Seoul Games, when the Americans fell to East Germany. Singapore is the place to regroup and add youth, with the home Los Angeles Olympics in view. The American men had a tough Olympics with the only gold from Bobby Finke in the 1,500. Look for some new faces in Singapore. 'The average age of our men's team is younger than the average age of our women's team,' U.S. coach Greg Meehan told The AP. He said it was 'the first time in recent memory.' He ran off names like freestylers Jack Alexy, Luke Hobson, and Rex Maurer and Luka Urlando in the butterfly. 'I do acknowledge that the rest of the world is getting better. There is no doubt about it,' Meehan said. 'I love a challenge — I'm going to lean into that.' Familiar names stand out on the women's side — Katie Ledecky, Gretchen Walsh, Torri Huske, Kate Douglass and Regan Smith. Ledecky, of course, is a nine-time Olympic gold medalist and holds world records in the 800 and 1,500 freestyle. Walsh holds the world record in the 100 fly, and Smith in the 100 backstroke. Yes. A 12-year-old swimmer named Yu Zidi from China is competing in the world championships, and her incredible times mean she might win a medal. At 12. Yu has qualified in the 200 and 400 IMs and the 200 fly. Her time of 2:10.63 in the 200 IM was the fastest ever from a 12-year-old swimmer — female or male. Yu has a best in the 200 fly of 2:06.83 and 4:35.53 in the 400 IM. Both times would have been good enough for fourth place in last year's Olympics. The Chinese stars are Pan Zhanle, who set a world record of 46.40 in 100 freestyle in Paris, and Qin Haiyang. Qin holds the world record in the 200 breaststroke in 2:05.48.