
Why does South Carolina's Dawn Staley wear so many bracelets?
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Are we underestimating Dawn Staley and South Carolina this year?
USA Today's Mackenzie Salmon and Meghan Hall talk about how this women's South Carolina team is slightly overlooked as we approach March Madness.
Sports Seriously
Dawn Staley wears beaded necklaces and bracelets given to her by young people, many facing serious illnesses.
Staley says she wears the jewelry to show empathy and keep perspective on life's challenges.
'I wear them until they break,' she said.
COLUMBIA, S.C. — During South Carolina's win in the first round of women's March Madness on Friday, head coach Dawn Staley wore a new diamond-studded, NCAA championship trophy chain given to her by rapper Plies.
The chain was not alone around her neck – it hung alongside beaded bracelets and necklaces. These pieces of jewelry aren't new — they've been a part of Staley's routine outfit since the summer of 2023. But every so often, a new one is added to the collection.
'When young people give me the bracelets, I just immediately put them on,' Staley said Saturday, ahead of her team facing No. 9 Indiana in the second round on Sunday.
South Carolina senior forward Sania Feagin recently counted 28 bracelets on her coach's right wrist, Staley said.
'I wear them until they break,' she said.
Some of Staley's necklaces are gifts from children in the hospital, one from a young man who has sickle cell disease. Staley's cousin died from sickle cell, and she said it gives her a different perspective.
'I do have empathy for what they go through, and if it helps me to stay empathetic, I'm gonna wear them,' Staley said of her handmade necklaces and bracelets.
Staley won the 2024 Jimmy V Award for Perseverance at the ESPY Awards. Staley's sister, Tracey Underwood, is recovering from leukemia and her friend and former assistant coach Nikki McCray-Penson died in 2023 after a 10-year battle with breast cancer.
Two of the necklaces are from Blakely, a young girl going through cancer treatments. Staley met her while visiting the UVA children's hospital in 2023.
'For us, it's our world, it's our passion, it's what we do,' Staley said of the focus she and her team have on their sport. 'It's really just basketball when you put it in perspective of what other people have to go through.'
Olivia Noni is a student in the University of Georgia's Sports Media Certificate program.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
7 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Fever's Sophie Cunningham Gets Honest About Caitlin Clark's Injury
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Indiana Fever have suffered through a rough season when it comes to superstar guard Caitlin Clark. She has struggled with injuries all season long and remains out due to her groin injury. Despite not having their superstar player, the Fever have remained very competitive. In fact, they have won four straight games and now hold a 16-12 record. So far this season, Indiana has remained a playoff contender. If Clark can get healthy, the Fever could still make a championship run. However, they need her back on the court to make that kind of a run. Sophie Cunningham #8 and Caitlin Clark #22 of the Indiana Fever cheer from the bench against the Chicago Sky at the United Center on June 07, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. Sophie Cunningham #8 and Caitlin Clark #22 of the Indiana Fever cheer from the bench against the Chicago Sky at the United Center on June 07, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. Photo byAs Clark's groin injuries continues to nag her and force her to miss more time, fans have questioned whether or not she'll be able to return this season. That remains to be seen. Read more: Caitlin Clark Facing Backlash After Fever Star's Latest Off-Court Move Recently, Indiana teammate spoke out about Clark's injury. She called the groin issue "weird" when describing it. "It's such, like, a weird injury," Cunningham said. "She's not in pain all the time. But when you do hurt it you're out for I think they're trying to be like extra cautious so she doesn't kind of have those little setbacks." Clark has only been able to play in 13 of the team's 28 games this season. When she has played, the injuries have caused a clear issue for her and she hasn't been able to find a rhythm. During the 2025 season, Clark has averaged 16.5 points per game to go along with 8.8 assists, five rebounds, and 1.6 steals. She has only shot 36.7 percent from the floor and 27.9 percent from three-point range. Those numbers clearly are not the kind of WNBA MVP production that many expected to see from the 23-year-old superstar. Read more: Candace Parker Sends Brutally Honest Angel Reese Message Hopefully, Indiana's patience pays off. The Fever are focused only on getting Clark back to fully health. Once she reaches that point, Clark will be back on the floor. No one knows if that point will come this season, but Indiana and its fans are holding out hope that she can return in 2025. Expect to hear more about Clark's injury in the near future. For now, it's a "weird" injury that has cost one of the most entertaining players in the WNBA far too many games. Make sure to follow Newsweek Sports for all Indiana Fever and WNBA news and updates.


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Angel Reese jokingly blames teammate of Caitlin Clark, Sophie Cunningham for sex toy fiasco: 'Getting weird'
A sex toy plague has hit the WNBA, as two games this week - both Golden State Valkyries road games - had a neon green dildo thrown on the court. On Friday night, a matchup between the Valkyries and the Sky in Chicago was interrupted in the third quarter when the object flew across the court. The officials stopped the game to remove the lime green adult toy, and play continued. Indiana Fever star Sophie Cunningham pleaded with the culprits to "stop throwing dildos on the court," but Angel Reese placed the blame - jokingly - on one of Cunningham's, and Caitlin Clark's, teammates. "hey [Sydney Colson] why do you keep throwing your mean green in different arenas…. it's getting weird," Reese posted on X late Friday night. Colson replied with a photo of herself smirking - while wearing a green jacket. Reese and Colson have had playful banter before. After Reese was part of the championship-winning Unrivaled league team, she got a $50,000 bonus. That prompted Colson to crack a joke about Reese giving her the money. "Hey angel girl, just wanted to check in and see how ur doing and just let u know I'm here for u if u need anything…esp if u need to get rid of 50k by tomorrow or anything like that…" Colson wrote to Reese on social media. Colson was declined. "hey sista. i'm doing well. just won 50k on a flight. I know you are VERY aware & i'm sorry to break it to you but i'm on a rookie contract & that 50k was a little more than half of my contract so I have to keep that to myself…. sorry :( give me a few years and i gotchu. be well," Reese replied. It's unclear whether anyone was ejected from the game for throwing the object.

Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
VIDEO: Charlie Woods highlights from the 49th Junior PGA Championships
Highlights of Charlie Woods from the second round of the 49th Junior PGA Championships on July 31 in Indiana. All video contributed by Jordan Kalman.