South-Carolina
A’ja Wilson thanks Dawn Staley, South Carolina basketball in accepting 2024 WNBA MVP award

A’ja Wilson sat between her college coach, Dawn Staley, and her WNBA coach, Becky Hammon, and got choked up thinking about the impact they have had on her life.
That was back in May at Colonial Life Arena in Columbia, South Carolina. The Las Vegas Aces center spoke to the media before an Aces preseason game, and she thanked Staley for making her into the person she has become.
Four months later, Wilson stood before the media Sunday night in Las Vegas in a bright red pantsuit after being named the 2024 WNBA MVP. Again, she recognized the influence the South Carolina women’s basketball coach has had on her life and career.
“I want to thank South Carolina and Coach Staley,” said Wilson, who also mentioned her family. “I truly wouldn’t be standing here today without the hard work and sacrifices made by all those people . . . it’s humbling to walk a path paved by so many legends of this game, those who made this league what it is today.”
Wilson earned all 67 first-place votes for 670 points to become the second player in WNBA history to win the MVP unanimously — Cynthia Cooper did it in 1997.
Wilson, who was named league MVP in 2020 and 2022, joins Sheryl Swoopes, Lisa Leslie and Lauren Jackson as three-time MVP winners. The award comes one week after Wilson broke the WNBA record for most points in a single season, and five days after she broke the single-season rebounding record. She finished her seventh season with a league-high average of 26.9 points per game.
Staley coached Wilson at South Carolina from 2014 to 2018, and Staley won her first NCAA championship with Wilson in 2017. Wilson holds the program’s career records in points (2,389), blocked shots (363), free throws made (597) and free throws attempted (835).
On Sunday morning, Staley took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to hype up Wilson.
“THE UNANIMOUS MVP OF@WNBA BELONGS TO@_ajawilson22! Congrats A! Deserving! Earned! And Forced this one! And to the voters I’m proud to say you represented the game well….see yall for @WNBA DPOY soon,” Staley wrote.
The Aces finished the 2024 regular season as the No. 4 seed and face the No. 5 Seattle Storm in the first round of the WNBA playoffs.
THE MOMENT: Look: Las Vegas Aces star A’ja Wilson learns she won her third WNBA MVP award
Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at lkesin@gannett.com and follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, @Lulukesin

South-Carolina
Priority South Carolina target, top-100 prospect reclassfies to 2026

One of South Carolina’s top targets in the class of 2027 has reclassified to 2026. Elite Indian Land High School athlete Sequel Patterson will graduate early to get a jump on his collegiate career. At this time, it is unclear if he will be a winter or spring graduate.
Patterson is a big-time talent on both sides of the ball, hence his designation as an “athlete” by the recruiting industry. He has the talent and physical makeup to be an impact player at wide receiver or cornerback at the next level. The Gamecocks and receivers coach Mike Furrey want him on offense.
Listed at 6-0 and 170 pounds, Patterson is explosive and versatile. On offense, he logged over 1200 yards of offense as a receiver, rusher, and passer, and on defense, he was a lockdown player on the outside of the Indian Land defense.
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Tennessee has seemed to be the major competition for South Carolina in Patterson’s recruitment. Florida State, Georgia, Michigan, Arkansas, Boston College, Georgia Tech, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan State, Maryland, NC State, North Carolina, Pittsburgh, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Texas A&M, and West Virginia are the other power conference programs with offers in for the talented Palmetto State native. Clemson hasn’t offered yet but has been (and will be) involved.
Ahead of his reclassification, On3’s industry ranking listed Patterson as the country’s No. 79 overall prospect. He was also No. 2 in South Carolina and No. 3 nationally among athletes. 247Sports had him firmly in 5-star territory as the No. 18 overall player in America. If his current rating of 92.13 doesn’t change, he would rank as the No. 141 player in On3’s industry ranking.
South-Carolina
Potential 2028 presidential hopefuls Moore, Walz steal show at South Carolina Democratic weekend

South-Carolina
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's next move: Energizing Democrats in South Carolina and California

MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz will seek to energize activists at Democratic state conventions in South Carolina and California on Saturday, as the party’s 2024 vice presidential nominee works to keep up the high national profile he gained when Kamala Harris selected him as her running mate.
Walz, a former schoolteacher who went to Congress and then became his state’s governor, will keynote the South Carolina gathering in Columbia, traditionally a showcase for national-level Democrats and White House hopefuls. Another leader who often appears on those lists, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, spoke Friday night at the party’s fundraising dinner.
South Carolina held the first Democratic presidential primary of the 2024 campaign, and the party hopes for a repeat as first in line in 2028. But the national party organizations haven’t settled their 2028 calendars yet, and party officials in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada are also vying to go first.
”From the classroom to the governor’s office, Tim Walz leads with compassion and common sense,” the South Carolina party posted on social media earlier this month when it announced his appearance. ”He’s proof that you can govern with both heart and backbone, and he’s bringing that message to South Carolina.”
Walz, who’s on a long list of potential 2028 candidates who have been traveling to early-voting states, will also be a featured speaker as California Democrats gather in Anaheim on Saturday.
”We’re fired up to welcome Minnesota Governor Tim Walz to the Convention stage in Anaheim,” state chair Rusty Hicks said in a statement. ”He’s a former teacher, a veteran, and a trailblazer who’s spent his career fighting for working families and standing up for the values we all share — fairness, dignity, and opportunity for all.”
Democrats have been debating since Harris lost to President Donald Trump in November over which direction the party should take. That self-examination reflects deep frustrations among Democratic voters that their leaders are failing to put up enough resistance against Trump, who has taken a much more aggressive approach to his second term in the White House.
Walz hasn’t officially said if he’ll seek a third term in 2026, but acknowledges he’s thinking about it. He said in a recent interview with KSTP-TV that he would probably wait to decide until July, after he calls a special session of the closely divided Minnesota Legislature to finish work on the state’s next budget. Those negotiations have gone slowly despite his frequent meetings with legislative leaders.
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