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Saniyah King left her mark at Howard. Now she eyes success in the SEC.
Saniyah King left her mark at Howard. Now she eyes success in the SEC.

Miami Herald

timea day ago

  • Lifestyle
  • Miami Herald

Saniyah King left her mark at Howard. Now she eyes success in the SEC.

Saniyah King, the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Rookie of the Year, did not land at Mississippi State for the next chapter of her basketball career due to a lack of success or a winning pedigree. The ex-HBCU point guard averaged 11.5 points, 3.1 rebounds, and a MEAC and Bison-best 4.5 assists per game while starting in 31 of 32 games for Howard University last season. She also dished the second-most assists (145) among freshmen in the nation behind Florida Gators guard Liv McGill. King wants to continue her basketball evolution with dreams of playing in the WNBA after college. With the departure of MSU's guards Jerkaila Jordan and Eniya Russell to graduation, and Denim DeShields taking her talents to Mississippi (Ole Miss), the Bulldogs needed another collection of elite point guards. King is what Purcell needs while also believing the Bulldogs' coach and his staff will help her fulfill her hoops dream. "My main goal [for entering the transfer portal] was development," King told HBCU Gameday. "I know [Mississippi State] is going to help me become the best version of myself." Things will look extremely different for King this fall. She spent her entire life in the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia (DMV) region with her mother, Stacey Pettiford. However, Pettiford - an HBCU alum from Howard University - tried to get the 5'7" point guard to leave the DMV to explore her basketball dreams elsewhere. "I wanted her to go away," Pettiford said. "It's a big world out there, and she'd experienced the DMV all of her life." King wasn't ready to take her talents from the big city to a new hoops terrain. But now, as she transitions to Starkville, Mississippi, the sophomore floor general is ready to embrace her next chapter, one that will include some "peace and quiet." "I wanted to slow my life down," King said. "I don't know what life is like without hearing trains, ambulances, and cars constantly passing by. I wanted new scenery. That helps me feel at peace now." King's choice and determination to ditch familiarity for the Magnolia State would not be possible without confidence in her dream, faith in God, and the lessons learned at "The Mecca" of HBCU culture. King, who at 10 years old did not have experience hooping with an elite club team, strolled into a DMV gym for a tryout with the Lady Prime AAU basketball team, coached by then-Washington D.C. street hoops legend Lonnie Harrell. Tons of budding, young female basketball players graced the court. After a couple of drills and some intense 5-on-5 action, Harrell walked over to Pettiford and did not waste any time in his desire for King to join the team. "I remember [her tryout] like it was yesterday," Pettiford said. "Harrell was like, 'we need her' and asked 'how long had she [Saniyah] been playing?'" King's genesis in basketball began with playing with boys at the park during recess in elementary school and running a few houses down the street in her Bowie, Maryland, neighborhood to play pickup games during the week. "I didn't think I was good," King said with a laugh. Her talent reached new heights when she joined Lady Prime. That season, King and her teammates didn't lose a game. As her skills grew with Lady Prime, it later opened the door for success at Bishop Ireton - a private Catholic high school in Alexandria, Virginia - as well as on the AAU circuit playing for Team Durant EYBL, named after 15-time NBA All-Star and DMV native Kevin Durant. However, a "turning point" in her personal development came during the height of the coronavirus pandemic when she completed workout sessions three times per day with Joshua Morgan-Green, the founder of the Triple Threat training regimen based in Annapolis Junction, Maryland. "I was probably there from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.," King said. "When I was younger, I was always stronger and a little faster than my peers. That summer, I really got skilled. My ball handling went to a different level, I perfected my shot, and learned how to work. He [Green] changed my life." King entered the Washington, D.C.-based HBCU after excelling in the classroom as an AP scholar and becoming one of the top 15 point guards in Virginia for assists per game. She held a long lineage of Howard pride in her family. Pettiford, one of King's 11 family members to attend HU, played a key part in her daughter's interest in attending Howard after many years of taking King to basketball games and events on the HBCU campus. King, who had spent all of 18 years of her life living with her mom prior to attending HU, saw Pettiford depart the DMV to move to Atlanta during her freshman year. "When I was at home with her [Pettiford] every day, I would spend most of my time in my room," King said with a laugh. "Seeing her leave helped me mature emotionally." With a 10-hour trek separating the two, King began to realize the lessons Pettiford shared with her about life, time management, and avoiding worldly distractions in pursuit of her dreams, both on and off the court. However, when she entered the gates of the renowned Main Quadrangle, walked across The Yard or stepped inside Frederick Douglas Memorial Hall and Burr Gymnasium for the first time, she quickly found out that Howard was the epitome of "Black excellence" but also a place where she had to grow up and balance a myriad of priorities as a student athlete. "I underestimated college," King said. "Howard helped me come to that realization very fast. It wasn't the normal college experience. … Howard really prepares you for the real world." While pursuing a degree in psychology, King navigated her way as the only freshman on a veteran HBCU women's basketball program - coached by Ty Grace - that featured a combined dozen seniors and grad transfer players, including her friend and teammate, Destiny Howell, the Bison's leading scorer in 2024. "Saniyah is just the player you enjoy and want to play with," Howell previously told Howard Athletics consultant Rob Knox in December. "The first thing I noticed about her is that she is not scared of work, she does not duck no smoke. …She is a good person, making it easier to be a good teammate." King shared similar sentiments about Howell and also credited her leadership. "Destiny [Howell] always sat and watched game film with me and offered encouraging words," King said. "She would tell me that I'm "HER" and to walk like it." But with Pettiford away and a surplus of daily college life distractions around her, it forced King to find herself while remaining focused on her goals in the classroom as well as becoming the best point guard on the hardwood. King leaned into her faith in God to navigate her challenges. Each day, she logged into Instagram, swiped to her bio section and visited one of her highlights named Daily Words of Encouragement (DWOE), which listed her favorite Bible verses and quotes. One of her go-to scriptures comes from Matthew 19:26, which reads, "Jesus looked at them and said, 'With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.'" As her freshman season progressed, when she wasn't in class, at practice, or lifting weights with her teammates, she watched sermons and read the Bible, drawing closer to God when she was unable to attend Sunday services at Kingdom Fellowship AME Church in Silver Springs, Maryland. "I was in a place where I had to find and put God at the forefront of my life," King said. "His presence in my life strengthened my mindset and my vision to conquer my goals." As King embraced her walk with God, she matured in the face of adversity. King, who became a force for Howard in HBCU women's basketball, captured Rookie of the Week honors 11 times. With three games remaining against North Carolina Central, South Carolina State, and the defending MEAC champions Norfolk State, Howard sat in second place (17-9) in the MEAC standings. The Bison entered their clash with NCCU, winners of seven consecutive contests and 10 of their last 11 games since league play began on Jan. 4. And for King, her focus remained on finishing the season strong and getting another chance to face the Spartans. However, things took a twist for the Bison point guard. King injured her left foot in Howard's 74-51 victory against the Eagles, sidelining her for the final games of the regular season. She wasn't a stranger to foot injuries. King struggled with bone bruises over the years due to the absence of an arch in her feet. But with the MEAC tournament around the corner, her shot at helping Howard dethrone the Spartans and securing an automatic bid in the women's NCAA tournament remained in motion. However, with an injury comes a wave of emotions and physical challenges. When she returned to the court for the league tourney - specifically in Howard's matchup against Maryland Eastern Shore in the MEAC semifinals - King didn't feel like herself on the court. "I played a little scared," King said. "I wasn't trying to land a certain way [on my foot] and I kept thinking about that. That's not my usual mindset." HU's win set up the MEAC title against the Spartans and future 2025 WNBA signee Diamond Johnson, a player whom King respected, studied, and watched from afar throughout her college career in the Big Ten and HBCU hoops. But like the first two contests, NSU defeated Howard 68-56, ending the Bison's NCAA tourney hopes. "This was supposed to be the time that I shined [on the court]," King said. "It was almost like they [Spartans] had every single play we tried to run rehearsed." Still, the Bison received an automatic qualifying bid to the Women's National Invitational Tournament (WNIT), defeating Siena at home in the first round before losing to Charleston in the second round. Despite the loss, King felt like she took a step forward in her progression after the injury. "My shot was falling, it was like I had woken back up," she said. As King transitions to Starkville, she's embracing the progression of her game. Her daily 7 a.m. workouts include weight lifting, watching film, listening to basketball podcasts as well as improving her technique and feel for reading ball screens and elevating her shooting percentage from beyond the arc. "I hate waking up early," King said. "But since the season ended, I continued that habit. … Losing in the [MEAC] tournament and heading to a new school has inspired me to work even harder this summer. I want to improve my vision to open up the floor more for my teammates." King will have the opportunity to upgrade those skills and more as one of the Bulldogs' floor generals, in addition to pursuing a business degree at MSU. As she navigates her process, King is catching up on family time with her grandfather - who never missed her home games - and spending time with her four little brothers all under the age of 12. She's also going on nail appointments, along with brunch and dinner dates with Pettiford. And when the two aren't tasting new foods at a restaurant, King is whipping up delightful meals in the kitchen, featuring entrées like whole fish, alfredo, roasted Branzino, along with an occasional sweet potato casserole. "She's really a whole chef," Pettiford said with a laugh. "Cooking in the kitchen and on the court." For King, Howard University and her time in HBCU basketball symbolized family on multiple fronts. While she won't walk across The Yard every day this fall, she will take the memories of her teammates and a stronger relationship with Pettiford to Mississippi for a new beginning. "God gave me the older sisters I always wanted but I never had when he brought me to Howard," King said. I love and will miss them all. The post Saniyah King left her mark at Howard. Now she eyes success in the SEC. appeared first on HBCU Gameday. Copyright HBCU Gameday 2012-2025

Predicting Auburn basketball's starting five after Tahaad Pettiford's return announcement
Predicting Auburn basketball's starting five after Tahaad Pettiford's return announcement

USA Today

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Predicting Auburn basketball's starting five after Tahaad Pettiford's return announcement

Predicting Auburn basketball's starting five after Tahaad Pettiford's return announcement Tahaad Pettiford's return is huge for Auburn basketball. Here's a look at how the Tigers could line up next season. Auburn basketball locked in its final roster pieces Wednesday by signing Serbian-born forward Filip Jovic and reeling in Tahaad Pettiford from the NBA draft. The roster moves not only excited the Auburn fan base, but put the finishing touches on the 2025-26 roster. Despite Pettiford's return, Auburn fans will still need to get familiar with the new-look roster, as a bulk of last year's Final Four roster has departed from the team due to either graduation or the transfer portal. Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl and his staff worked tirelessly to find experienced pieces to fill those gaps this offseason, and managed to put together a solid mix of strong scorers and lockdown defenders. Now that the roster is built, how will the new-look Tigers lineup look next season? Here is our projection for the Auburn Tigers' starting five for the 2024-25 season. Guard 1: Tahaad Pettiford 2024-25 stats: 38 games played | 1 start | 11.6 PPG | 2.2 RPG | 3.0 APG Pettiford's return to Auburn is crucial, as he is the lone piece from Auburn's Final Four team remaining on the roster. Pettiford was a bench piece last season, but will transition easily to the starting point guard role. Reserve: Kaden Magwood Guard 2: Abdul Bashir 2024-25 stats (Casper College): 31 games played | 31 starts | 27.2 PPG | 3.8 RPG | 4.2 APG Bashir joins Auburn's roster as the No. 1 overall JUCO prospect from the 2025 recruiting cycle. He is a proven scoring threat, having reached double digits in points in all but one game last season and scoring 40 points four times. Pearl believes that Bashir will become one of the program's next great shooters and has potential to become a dominant player in orange and blue. Reserve: Kevin Overton Wing: Keyshawn Hall 2024-25 stats (UCF): 33 games played | 33 starts | 18.8 points per game | 7.1 RPG | 2.4 APG Hall led the Big 12 in scoring last season and is looking to bring his high-scoring profile to the SEC. He brings help to the board game as well by logging 6.2 rebounds per game over his three-year career, which included a 7.1 mark last season. Reserve: Sebastian Williams-Adams Forward: Elyjah Freeman 2024-25 stats (Lincoln Memorial): 31 games played | 28 starts | 18.9 PPG | 8.7 RPG | 2.3 APG Freeman has large shoes to fill this season as he is projected to take over the four position that Johni Broome occupied over the last three seasons. Freeman was the second-leading scorer at Lincoln-Memorial last season, but was a worthy defender as well. He pulled down a team-best 197 defensive rebounds per game with 54 steals and 23 blocked shots. Reserve: Filip Jovic Center: Keshawn Murphy 2024-25 stats (Mississippi State): 34 games | 3 starts | 11.7 PPG | 7.4 RPG | 1.6 APG What is meant to be will always find its way. Murphy, a native of Birmingham, was a high-priority target for Bruce Pearl during his high school days and is now a Tiger after joining the roster from the transfer portal last offseason. Murphy brings a 6-10 frame to the center position, as well as a strong scoring a rebounding presence. He has one season of eligibility remaining, which will allow JUCO center Emeka Opurum to develop into the role for next season. Reserve: Emeka Opurum Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter @TaylorJones__

Auburn fans go crazy on social media after Tahaad Pettiford's decision to return
Auburn fans go crazy on social media after Tahaad Pettiford's decision to return

USA Today

time7 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Auburn fans go crazy on social media after Tahaad Pettiford's decision to return

Auburn fans go crazy on social media after Tahaad Pettiford's decision to return Auburn fans are buzzing after learning of Tahaad Pettiford's decision to withdraw from the NBA draft. Auburn basketball fans have had an eventful Wednesday. The day started with the commitment of International forward Filip Jovic, and continued with the news of star guard Tahaad Pettiford announcing his return to Auburn after testing the NBA draft waters. Pettiford returns to Auburn after averaging 11.6 points, 3.0 assists, and 2.2 rebounds per game in 34 games with one start. His return all but ensures that he will be the Tigers' starting point guard in a starting five that will feature five new faces including Mississippi State transfer Keshawn Murphy and UCF transfer Keyshawn Hall. As expected, Auburn fans took to social media to share their excitement. Here is a look at the best social media reactions to Tahaad Pettiford's return to Auburn. The announcement Bruce Pearl chimes in Huge news for Auburn basketball More of this is what we are looking forward to seeing A full season of Tahaad Pettiford starting will be fun An extra year of development will make him a star in the NBA Who will win the race? Is an All-American honor coming? Tahaad Pettiford's return is good for the sport Is Auburn a top-10 team with Pettiford? Another year of memes incoming Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter @TaylorJones__

Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA Draft, will return to Auburn after Final Four run
Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA Draft, will return to Auburn after Final Four run

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA Draft, will return to Auburn after Final Four run

Bruce Pearl has a key piece returning next fall after all. Auburn guard Tahaad Pettiford will withdraw from the NBA Draft and return to the Tigers next season instead, he told ESPN's Jonathan Givony on Tuesday. 'I was happy to go through the process, getting feedback from NBA teams,' Pettiford told ESPN . 'Going back to Auburn is a better situation for me. I see myself being a higher pick next year. It wasn't 100% this year, so I didn't want to take that chance. Being a short guard, it won't be easy to play in the league, but I know I can do it. It's maybe not the right time.' Advertisement Pettiford shined at the draft combine and worked out with six different teams while testing the waters. The goal, though, was reportedly to ensure that he'd be a first-round pick. Yahoo Sports' Kevin O'Connor had Pettiford going No. 30 overall to the Los Angeles Clippers in his latest mock draft, so that doesn't leave Pettiford any room for error whatsoever. So instead, Pettiford will return to Auburn for his sophomore season, where a 'robust' NIL package is waiting for him, according to CBS Sports' Matt Norlander . Specifics of that deal aren't known. Pettiford will then be a projected first-round pick in the 2026 draft. Advertisement Pettiford, who will turn 20 this summer, averaged 11.6 points and three assists in nearly 23 minutes per game last season with the Tigers. He earned a spot on the SEC's All-Freshman Team, and he helped lead the team to the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA tournament. The Tigers went 32-6 last season and reached the Final Four, though they fell to eventual national champion Florida in the semifinal. Pettiford is the only key player from last year's group to return to Auburn. The school has landed several notable pieces in the transfer portal, however, including UCF forward Keyshawn Hall, Mississippi State forward KeShawn Murphy and Texas Tech guard Kevin Overton. Auburn also landed forward Filip Jovic out of Serbia on Wednesday, too. The first round of the NBA Draft is set for June 25. The deadline for players to withdraw from the draft and return to college is on Wednesday night.

Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA draft, elects to return to Auburn
Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA draft, elects to return to Auburn

USA Today

time7 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA draft, elects to return to Auburn

Tahaad Pettiford withdraws from NBA draft, elects to return to Auburn Great news! Auburn guard Tahaad Pettiford will return to the Plains for his sophomore season. Auburn basketball's outlook for the 2025-26 season is clearer now that a key piece of last season's Final Four roster is set to return. Tahaad Pettiford shared on Instagram Wednesday that he will return to Auburn for his sophomore season after testing the NBA draft waters. He averaged 11.6 points and 3.0 rebounds for the Tigers last season, primary in a bench role in relief of starting guard Denver Jones. Pettiford entered NBA draft consideration last month after hinting at a possible return following Auburn's Final Four run. However, he made it clear that he would only leave Auburn if he received a first-round grade. Despite seeing his stock rise following the Final Four and his performance at the NBA draft combine, he felt that returning to the Plains would benefit his development. "I was happy to go through the process, getting feedback from NBA teams," Pettiford said in an interview with ESPN. "Going back to Auburn is a better situation for me. I see myself being a higher pick next year. It wasn't 100% this year, so I didn't want to take that chance." Before Pettiford announced his return, Auburn head coach Bruce Pearl said that he felt his squad would be much better with Pettiford on the floor. "If he decides to come back to Auburn, we'll be a lot better team," Pearl said of Pettiford. "If he came back, there would be more on him. And I think he's looking forward to that possibility — that I'm going to ask him to do a little bit more, so he can show out a little bit more." Pettiford is Auburn's only returning contributor from the 2025 Final Four squad, and will now see his role increased at the point guard position. He will join newcomers Keyshawn Hall, Keshawn Murphy, Filip Jovic, and Kevin Overton in Auburn's new-look starting five. Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter @TaylorJones__

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