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WNBA Draft

Ta’Niya Latson (right) of South Carolina poses with WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert (left) after the Los Angeles Sparks selected Latson with the 20th pick during the 2026 WNBA draft on April 13, 2026, at The Shed in New York City. Sports

Ta’Niya Latson drew inspiration from old Hollywood for her WNBA draft outfit

South Carolina Gamecock’s look paid homage to Black glamour icons

Sports

At Alabama, Zaay Green built on skills, lessons gleaned throughout college career

Crimson Tide’s No. 2 scorer hopes to hear her name called in the WNBA draft

Sports

NC State’s Saniya Rivers nearly cast aside her WNBA dream. Now it’s coming true.

After adversity shook her self-confidence, an All-Star’s encouraging words inspired the Wolfpack guard to recommit herself to the game

HBCU

After her standout play at multiple schools, Diamond Johnson hopes WNBA is next stop

With honors from the Big Ten, ACC and MEAC on her résumé, Norfolk State guard believes she is ready: ‘Whatever you need me to do, I can do it’

Sports

WNBA’s 2024 draft class brings momentum to the league on and off the court

Stars such as Angel Reese, Rickea Jackson, Cameron Brink, Caitlin Clark seamlessly merge fashion, beauty and culture

Sports

UCLA guard Charisma Osborne’s perseverance places her on the cusp of the WNBA draft

The talented two-way player went from unsure of the college basketball lifestyle to one of the nation’s elite players

Sports

Laeticia Amihere’s WNBA dream was cultivated by injury, loss and perseverance

South Carolina and Team Canada standout overcame family tragedy and two knee injuries to become one of the WNBA draft’s most intriguing prospects

Sports

‘It just felt amazing’: Jackson State’s Ameshya Williams-Holliday drafted by Indiana Fever, ending WNBA’s drought of HBCU players

The Lady Tigers center was selected by the Fever with the 25th pick, becoming the first HBCU player drafted since 2002

Sports

Jackson State’s Ameshya Williams-Holliday wants to set the tone for HBCUs in the WNBA draft

The Lady Tigers’ top player once almost quit basketball for good, but has reemerged as a WNBA prospect

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