More Than a Champion: Dawn Staley’s Cultural Pilgrimage to Coppin State

BALTIMORE, MD – In the deliberate and profound choices of a champion, a culture finds its voice. This past Sunday, in the heart of West Baltimore, on a stage far smaller than the arenas she now owns, Dawn Staley offered a masterclass in that truth. Under Staley, the South Carolina women’s basketball program has captured nine SEC regular season championships, nine SEC tournament titles, six Final Fours, three NCAA national championships, twelve Sweet Sixteen appearances, five SEC player of the year awards and five SEC freshman of the year awards. Staley herself has been awarded SEC coach of the year five times. Her South Carolina Gamecocks, the most dominant force in women’s college basketball, did not host Coppin State University as a paid exhibition. They traveled to them. They walked into the 4,100-seat Physical Education Complex Arena, a venue that will hold barely a quarter of the faithful who regularly fill their own Colonial Life Arena, and they played.

The outcome was never in doubt. The meaning, however, was everything. In an era when college sports grow more transactional by the minute, Staley engineered a pilgrimage. She brought mythical greatness to an intimate space, echoing a tradition where artistry is refined not in sterile cathedrals but in the crucible of a knowing community. It was the basketball equivalent of hearing Aretha Franklin shake the rafters of a neighborhood club in 1967—an otherworldly talent choosing proximity to the culture that forged her.

With this single, elegant act, Staley did more than schedule a game. She claimed a legacy. She has emerged, unmistakably, as the most significant cultural voice in college basketball coaching today, the rightful successor to a lineage of giants: John Thompson, John Chaney and Nolan Richardson. Like them, she understands that her platform is not just for winning games, but for winning respect, for shaping minds, and for speaking truths that echo far beyond the hardwood.

Dawn Staley and Coppin State Coach Darrell Mosley

A Lineage Forged in Defiance and Dignity

The path Staley walks was paved by defiant pioneers. John Thompson of Georgetown was not merely a coach; he was a glowering, towel-draped monument to Black authority in a predominantly white institution. He was the first Black coach to win an NCAA title, but his greater victory was using his platform to demand educational equity for his players and to protest systemic injustice. John Chaney of Temple, a product of the Philadelphia playgrounds like Staley, was a volcanic teacher whose ferocity was rooted in an unshakable love for his “kids” and a furious demand for their fair shot. Nolan Richardson of Arkansas fought his own battles in the South, championing his “40 Minutes of Hell” as not just a style of play, but a metaphor for the relentless pressure Black excellence must apply to break down doors.

These men carried a sacred baton: the responsibility to succeed at the highest level while never assimilating away from the community that birthed them, to win on terms that often seemed stacked against them, and to pull others up as they climbed. It was a burden of representation that required equal parts tactical genius and cultural sovereignty.

Dawn Staley has not only picked up that baton; she is sprinting with it into new territory. As the only Black basketball coach, man or woman, to win multiple Division I national championships, her on-court dynasty is secure. But her cultural impact is what places her squarely in this lineage. She has built in Columbia, South Carolina, a city with a fraught racial history, what former state representative Bakari Sellers calls “arguably the largest Black fandom in women’s college basketball”. Game days at Colonial Life Arena are less sporting events than “family reunions,” a vibrant, intergenerational gathering of Black joy and pride orchestrated by a coach who is, as fans say, “one of us”.

Former State Representative and political commentator, Bakari Sellers

The Coppin State Game: A Homage to the Circuit

To understand the full weight of the trip to Coppin State, one must understand the historical parallel. For generations, the “Chitlin’ Circuit” of Black-owned theaters and clubs provided the only stage for artists like James Brown and Sam Cooke to hone their genius under segregation. In college sports, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) like those in the MEAC and SWAC conferences served a parallel purpose as incubators for phenomenal athletic talent barred from predominantly white institutions.

Integration opened doors but often drained talent from these vital cultural hubs. Today, the relationship between powerhouse programs and HBCUs is frequently transactional: a “buy game” where the smaller school travels for a guaranteed payout and a loss. For Staley to reverse this flow—to bring her titanic program to the HBCU’s home floor—is a radical act of respect. It is a direct homage to the circuit.

Fan with a Staley throwback Virginia Jersey

As detailed in reports, the genesis of the game was characteristically authentic. In 2024, Staley took to social media to fill a schedule gap, writing, “I love my HBCUs!” and setting the series in motion. For Coppin State, the impact is tangible. First-year coach Darrell Mosley, who has sought Staley’s advice throughout his career, noted that while a typical Coppin game might draw 200 fans, Staley’s visit would pack the 4,100-seat arena, generating crucial revenue from tickets, concessions and parking. Beyond finances, Mosley said, “It’s great advertisement… The biggest thing is what better weekend to do it than MLK weekend”.

Staley’s explanation was simple and profound: “It’s usually [smaller conference teams] having to come to us, why not return the favor, it’s for the greater good of the game”. She is using her unprecedented power not for convenience, but for community, providing her players an education in the broader cultural ecosystem of their sport and telling every young girl in West Baltimore that they are worthy of a visit from royalty.

Baltimore Mayor, The Honorable Brandon M. Scott in attendance

The Unflinching Voice: Advocacy as Coaching Philosophy

Staley’s cultural leadership extends far beyond symbolic gestures. She wields her platform with an unflinching courage that continues the advocacy work of her predecessors. Last April, on the eve of the national championship game, a reporter tried to pull her into the culture-war debate over transgender athletes. Staley could have demurred. Instead, she stated clearly: “I’m of the opinion that if you’re a woman, you should play… If you consider yourself a woman and you want to play sports or vice versa, you should be able to play”.

Black LGBTQ+ leaders immediately applauded her. Dr. David J. Johns of the National Black Justice Coalition noted the “additional weight and tension” shaped by her race and gender, and the significance of her speaking out amid a flood of anti-trans legislation. She knew she would face a “barnstorm” of backlash, but, true to form, she said, “I’m OK with that”. This was not an isolated stance but part of a pattern. She has fiercely defended her players from racist “bully” tropes, fought for and won pay equity for herself and by extension all women coaches, and been a vocal advocate for Brittney Griner’s freedom.

This advocacy is her coaching philosophy. “By nature, I’m a life point guard,” Staley has said. “Being a servant to the game and being a servant for my team comes naturally to me. Whenever I can help my people, I’m going to go the extra mile”. She prepares her players for the battles off the court as diligently as for those on it, creating what she calls an “option” for young Black women to see someone who fundamentally understands them in a leadership role.

“We Had to Create Everything”: The North Philly Foundation

The source of Staley’s unshakeable authenticity is her origin story, which she has narrated with powerful clarity. She grew up in the Raymond Rosen Homes in North Philadelphia, a landscape of resourcefulness where “we had to create everything”. Basketball hoops were made from milk crates nailed to wood; track lanes were hand-drawn in the dirt. She recalls watching shows like Hart to Hart and learning that “to have those things, you had to look a certain way”. Her journey to the University of Virginia was a culture shock, a navigation of a world with “nothing in common” with where she was from.

This formative experience—of building something from nothing, of understanding the divide between the “haves and have-nots”—is the bedrock of her empathy and her mission. She knows what it means to be overlooked. She knows the electric pride of a community that sees itself in its champions. When she walks through Columbia today and hears Black residents say, “I had never been on that campus before coming to your game,” she understands her success is “bigger than basketball.” It is about “bringing together people who were once, and in some ways still are, divided”.

The Standard Bearer

The pantheon of college basketball’s greatest coaches is filled with names like Wooden, Krzyzewski, Summitt and Auriemma. Dawn Staley has earned her place among them by the cold calculus of championships and wins. But what makes her singular, what makes her the voice of a culture, is how she has achieved that dominance. She has done it while remaining, at every step, unmistakably and unapologetically herself—a proud Black woman from the projects of North Philly who never forgot the sound of the freight trains or the feel of a hand-painted foul line.

In her, the fierce dignity of Thompson, the passionate mentorship of Chaney, and the combative pride of Richardson find their contemporary expression. She carries their baton while sprinting past the limitations they faced, opening doors for those who will follow. Her trip to Coppin State was not a charity game. It was a homecoming, a communion, and a declaration. It was the sound of a voice, forged on the circuit, now powerful enough to fill any arena in the land, choosing to return to a packed, pulsing room where the walls between legend and neighbor, between past and present, beautifully come down. Dawn Staley gets it. And in getting it, she is leading the way.

A Clash of Titans: Auriemma and Staley Meet Again, With Philadelphia Ties Binding Them

PHILADELPHIA, PA – For the past 40 years, I’ve had a front-row seat to Phil Martelli’s brilliant college basketball mind—from the days when his “office” at Saint Joseph’s was little more than a converted broom closet in Alumni Memorial Fieldhouse to his 24-year reign as head coach. Phil was, and remains, my guy. And because he’s my guy, I’ve also been privy to the quiet confidence, the generational rivalries, and the Philadelphia-bred connections that have shaped the modern era of women’s college basketball.

Dawn Staley, resplendent in the Gucci drip

This Sunday’s national championship game between Geno Auriemma’s UConn Huskies and Dawn Staley’s South Carolina Gamecocks isn’t just a battle of the sport’s two best programs—it’s a collision of legacies, Philadelphia ties, and a coach’s unshakable belief in his homie.

At the peak of Geno’s dominance, when his UConn teams seemed invincible, I’d pop into Martelli’s office and tell him, “She’s coming.” Dawn Staley—the North Philly legend, the Raymond Rosen Projects product, the point guard who played with the ferocity of someone who knew the game owed her nothing—was closing the gap. Martelli, ever loyal to his longtime friend Geno, would shrug. “Nah, Del. Geno’s got this thing wired.”

Geno Auriemma, UCONN coaching legend

But then A’ja Wilson arrived in Columbia. Then came the national titles, the undefeated seasons, the undeniable truth: Dawn Staley had ascended to the throne once occupied by Pat Summitt and Geno himself. Now, she stands alongside Kim Mulkey as the new standard-bearers of the sport. And yet, Geno—ever the competitor—wants his crown back.

This morning, at 6 a.m., my phone buzzed with texts from Martelli. Of course, he’s riding with Geno. That’s what Phil does. But me? I’m riding with Dawn, the kid from NORF Philly who turned into a queen.

May the best team win. But know this: No matter the outcome, Philadelphia’s fingerprints are all over this game. And that, more than anything, is worth celebrating.

Dawn From Raymond Rosen… National Champion!!

One evening last fall, I sat with Phil Martelli in the St. Joseph’s Basketball offices and discussed, what else… the city game. Over the past 30 years, we’ve had maybe a 100 or so of these conversations. The only thing that’s changed is the size of his office and the amenities surrounding us.

In the beginning, we would sit in his “office” adjacent to the old Field House. This space housed two Assistant coaches and two desks. After that, there was room for maybe one media guide… if it was less than 200 pages. Seriously, there wasn’t enough room to house the sneaker collection of a bench player on Team Final or We R1 “B” team. It was a glorified closet, tiny and cramped… I loved it there…

Let me tell you… we talked a lot of shit in that little space…  Who’s good? Who stinks? Who’s gonna win? Who should St. Joseph’s be recruiting?

Then, Phil got a bump… Head Coach of the Hawks… With that came a move a few feet down the hall and a private office about the size of my dorm at Lincoln University… An improvement for sure, but still lacking the “Je Ne Sais Quoi” one typically associates with Division 1 basketball offices.

But the long,  meandering and captivating conversations continued…

Eventually, St. Joseph’s committed to upgrading it’s basketball facilities… Wow!! These days, Phil works out of an office suite befitting an senior executive with a Fortune 500 Company… Just to help you understand how far things have come, the square footage of tabletop in the conference room connected to his office is literally greater than that of his first office… SJU has stepped up big time…

Although we sit in a much more refined space and lounge on nicer furniture… The the conversations are the same as they always were…

Two Delaware County Hoop Heads sitting around talking a lot of shit!

That particular evening, last fall the conversation turned to women’s college basketball… Phil’s dear friend Geno Auriemma (below) has emerged as the greatest coach in the history of women’s college basketball.

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Who knew?

In 1979, Auriemma joined Martelli’s staff at Bishop Kenrick in 1979. They coached together in the Philadelphia Catholic League for two year before Auriemma left to join the women’s staff at the University of Virginia. After four years at Virginia, Auriemma took the reins of the nondescript UConn women’s program. Prior to Auriemma’s arrival at Storrs in 1985, the Huskies Women’s Basketball team had exactly one winning season in its history.

They fuckin’ stunk!

Since Geno’s been there, they have won an astonishing 11 NCAA Women’s D1 Championships. 23 Big East Regular Season Championships and 22 Conference Tournament Championships. The Huskie’s record during Auriemma’s tenure is an incredible 991-135. He’s been named the Naismith Coach of the Year 8 times…

By any reasonable measure, Geno is the one of the greatest coaches in the history of collegiate athletics… He’s up there with the likes of John Wooden, Bear Bryant, Pat Summit, Coach K and Nick Saban… Rarefied air indeed…

So… I understood where Phil was coming from… I got it when he declared:

“Nobody else is gonna win one ‘til Geno hangs ‘em up… He’s got this thing wired…”

Yeah… I understood… But I disagreed…

Fuck that!

“Dawn is gonna get one Phil…”

Now… I didn’t have much more to go on than pure faith in “Saint” Dawn… After all, Geno was in the middle of what seemed like a 9,874 game winning streak… I simply believed my lil’ homie from North Philly and the Raymond Rosen Projects would get it done…

Dawn Staley = Winning!!

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I remember it like is was yesterday, my college roommate, Dexter “Big Herb” Matthews (above left), was also from Raymond Rosen. It was 1987 and he kept talking about his youngbuck… This lil’ girl that was frying everybody… Big Herb emphatically insisted his neighbor and childhood friend was the best player in the world… male or female…

“Y’all niggas just don’t know… my youngin’ is the best player in the nation…”

“Fuck you talkin’ bout Herb?”

“I’m telling you… watch… y’all gonna see.”

That’s how I was introduced, in 1987, to Dawn Staley… So… I start following her in the box scores… one story, in particular, stands out… 26 point, 15 rebounds, 13 assists and 12 steals… Wait… What the fuck?

No dotcoms back then, had to take that ass to the store and pay $.50 cent to get the scoop. From the moment Big Herb put me on, I never missed one…

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Now I’ve always been a hoop head but I was not a huge fan of female version of the city game. Before Staley’s emergence, the only women’s games I ever watched up to that point were the first (1982) Women’s NCAA Championship featuring Coach Vivian Stringer, the great Yolanda Laney and USC’s televised games. I had to watch Cheyney State play for the national D1 title… Imagine that? Cheyney playing for the D1 Championship on national TV…  And, EVERYBODY had to watch USC and Cheryl Miller. She was just the finest female player of her era. To this day, I still say Cheryl, in her prime, would BUST lil’ brother Reggie’s ass…

Big Herb introduced me and ALL of fellas at Lincoln University to Dawn Staley and women’s basketball. For that, we are forever grateful…

We watched Staley (below) change women’s college basketball while playing at the University of Virginia.

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Dawn was the quintessential PHILLY GUARD! Along the lines of Guy Rogers, Earl Monroe, Pooh Richardson and Kyle Lowry. Beyond tough, very little flash and willing to die on the court… It really wasn’t fair for her opponents. Dawn was used to killing dudes on the playgrounds of North Philly. She was wired differently from the women she faced… Most often the smallest player, she literally dominated the game from the backcourt… She willed the UVA program to win after win…

The NCAA tournament? That was a forgone conclusion… The only question was: Would she win a National Championship? She led UVA to 4 NCAA Tournaments, three Final Four appearances and one National Championship game.

Must see TV!! I watched every second of every game…

The world soon discovered what Big Herb had been saying for years… Dawn Staley wasn’t to be fucked with on the court… She was ABOVE varsity… She was on some other level shit…

She was the ACC female athlete of the year and the national player of the year in 1991 and 1992. A true point guard, she scored when necessary to win the game… Which was often… Staley finished her college career with 2,135 points. She relentlessly pressured opposing point guards making them extremely uncomfortable handling the ball around her… Time after time, she would strip ‘em and leave BUTT NAKED while she laid the ball off the backboard for an easy two points… Staley holds the NCAA record for career steals with 454.

A true point GOD, she finished her career at Virginia as the as the ACC’s all-time leader in assists at 729.

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Since then, she’s collected three Olympic Gold Medals as a player, two more as an assistant coach and been inducted to the Naismith Hall of Fame.

Given a chance to work just few blocks from Raymond Rosen, Staley put Temple women’s basketball on the map. She began coaching Temple in 2000 while still playing professionally. In eight years, she led the Owls to 6 NCAA appearances and one WNIT.

Always looking for a challenge, and in search of that National Championship that eluded her as a player, Dawn decided to invade the SEC and challenge mighty Tennessee for SEC supremacy. She started from the bottom… This was no rehab… It was new construction…  The Gamecocks had only won a total of 20 games in the five years before her arrival.

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Her record at at South Carolina is 221-80. The previously moribund Gamecocks have made six consecutive appearances in the NCAA tournament, with three Sweet 16s and a Final Four in 2015… Dawn got ’em rolling… The Gamecocks have been stalking the Geno and the Huskies…

That night in the Ramsay Center, the shit talking continued…

“Fuck that Phil… I like Dawn to knock your boy off… Geno can’t keep winning every year…”

“I’m telling you Del… He’s got it figured out… He’s not gonna lose…”

Well… we didn’t get the matchup we wanted… Morgan Williams, the gifted 5 foot 5 point guard from Mississippi State ended Geno’s season with a beautiful pull up jumper in the semifinals…

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After making Williams literally disappear, Dawn and the Gamecocks got one! But, she didn’t knock off Geno… To be continued…

A guy from Darby Township and a coach from Landsdowne… Two Delco Hoop heads… with two friends vying for national supremacy year in, year out… Does it get any better than this?

I can’t wait to see Phil… I’m gonna talk a whole LOTTA shit!!