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Basketball legend Dawn Staley reflects on successes and challenges in 'Uncommon Favor'

Published 1 week ago4 minute read

Dawn Staley is a woman of many titles, five-time WNBA All-Star, Olympic gold medalist, head coach, and now an author.

In her first book, Staley reflects on the lessons that made her who she is today, from growing up in the projects of North Philadelphia, to college stardom, to being a WNBA pioneer, and an architect of an NCAA powerhouse at South Carolina.

The memoir is called "Uncommon Favor: Basketball, North Philly, My Mother, and the Life Lessons I Learned From All Three."

I spoke recently with Staley and asked her about first discovering her love of the game.

Dawn Staley, Author, "Uncommon Favor: Basketball, North Philly, My Mother, and the Life Lessons I Learned From All Three": Basketball was everything to me, but when I look back on it, being the youngest of five, you grow up in a household where you don't really have a perspective or an opinion because you're the youngest, and no one's listening.

And then, when I picked up a basketball, it really was a love affair. I found my identity playing the game, like, people saw me. Like, they really saw me for who was, whether that was a girl playing with all boys or whether there was a girl that was tough, a girl that didn't back down. There was a light shined on my life.

And it was — it's in a weird way that I felt that. But that light has never dimmed. And it's all because of the game that I fell in love with.

Well, what needs to change, and I do speak about it in "Uncommon Favor," is the decision-makers.

Like, I hope that I represent a portion of Black coaches that could be super successful in our game. Like, someone took a chance on me 25 years ago. I had zero coaching experience. All of my experience was playing.

I'm sure, at this stage of the game, there are a lot of Black coaches out there that have more, like way more experience than I did 25 years ago. They only need a chance. And I would say that, like all of us, if I have a — if I have someone to hire, yes, I'm going to reach into my personal Rolodex and I'm probably going to go through and see who have I worked with, who comes highly recommended?

And it is probably going to be a Black person, only because that's who I hang out with. That's who I know, right? It will take somebody else to give me another name that I didn't know for me to take a chance on. I think decision-makers will have to stretch themselves a little bit.

And we have to be less probably lazy about gathering lists of people that you can draw on, you know, if you have an opening. I'm talking about A.D.s, I'm talking about presidents, I'm talking to anybody that's going to be a part of the decision-making in deciding who's going to be your women's — your head women's basketball coach.

You mentioned my mother, Estelle Staley. Like, my mother lived for the church. She lived for, every time the church door opened, she was working in the vineyard. I mean, four to five times a week, she was at church.

Like, I saw her purpose, I saw what made her happy. And that grew on me. Of course, I'm not working in the vineyard as much as my mother, but basketball and being a dreamer is my vineyard. It really is, like, the players that I get a chance to coach, the families that I get a chance to impact. And, hopefully, I impacted so much that their generation would change.

I coach first-generational college graduates. Do you know the impact that that has on a family and the generations that come after that? Like, that is my purpose in life. That is what I am supposed to be doing in. And, hopefully, I'm fulfilling the debt that I owe basketball, because I owe basketball an incredible debt that I can't seem to pay down, because it keeps on giving me more and more.

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