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WELL. Caldwell liked hockey line changes and she’s about to get an entire team change at this pace.
And Cooper leaving might be the best thing for the program. She left South Carolina first… and why would you leave a program at or near the top every year, with an established record of putting players in the WNBA? Only two reasons: a) you didn’t want to attend class and graduate (Dawn’s rule), or b) you wanted more minutes up front than most freshmen and sophomores get in the South Carolina system, and weren’t willing to pay your dues.This is like watching the Hindenburg catch fire and burn… UT is an iconic brand in WBB. Lots of blame to share in this perfect storm of a dumpster fire: AD, head coach, players, and the portal/NIL universe which allowed it to happen. The sport as a whole is not helped by this… and, sadly, we’re likely to see it again.
South Carolina has a very spotty track record when it comes to guard development. Saniya Rivers and Milaysia Fulwiley left as well. Both made the right decision.And Cooper leaving might be the best thing for the program. She left South Carolina first… and why would you leave a program at or near the top every year, with an established record of putting players in the WNBA? Only two reasons: a) you didn’t want to attend class and graduate (Dawn’s rule), or b) you wanted more minutes up front than most freshmen and sophomores get in the South Carolina system, and weren’t willing to pay your dues.
And if Cooper is that type of “me first” player, UT should let her go and start fresh. The teams in the Final Four all have great team chemistry. The players who transferred into those programs were willing to buy into the culture of winning (see: Latson).
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Lady Volunteers land Oliviyah Edwards, No. 2 recruit in 2026
Oliviyah Edwards, the No. 2 player in the 2026 SportsCenter NEXT 100 class, has committed to Tennessee. The 6-foot-3 forward is the highest-rated recruit for the Lady Volunteers since 2019 and the first top-five recruit for coach Kim Caldwell.www.espn.com
Per this article the current freshmen class was a big reason for her choosing Knoxville.
If she reopens her recruitment, other finalists that could re-enter the chat are Washington, LSU, USC and South Carolina. I don’t think Florida will be in the mix again with the coaching change.
LSU would be the obvious pick with the Tennessee assistant moving there. LSU could use front court help too. Lola Lampleu and Grace Knox might play a similar role though to what Edwards would bring. Those 3 would make up a strong frontcourt.
Washington she could be a program changer for.
South Carolina is stacked in the frontcourt already. I don’t see this being the fit.
USC she could join the star studded lineup but she’d be a 4th or 5th option offensively and isn’t likely to get a lot of looks with Hall/Watkins/Jazzy in the lineup
Dad’s over involvement has always seemed like a major red flag. I think the first recruiting cycle they aggressively went after the highest bidder but I could be wrong.Writing on the wall of the Pauldo twins was there when the father was tweeting about the substitution patterns during the season, but then again I also question did he do any research on Caldwell and how she coaches before sending his daughters there.
Rivers I can’t speak to, but Fulwiley plays the exact same role for LSU that she did at South Carolina… first off the bench. One difference: this year, she’s watching the Final Four rather than playing in it.South Carolina has a very spotty track record when it comes to guard development. Saniya Rivers and Milaysia Fulwiley left as well. Both made the right decision.
Define guard development as I'm not sure how Rivers and Fulwiley made the right decision from that perspective.South Carolina has a very spotty track record when it comes to guard development. Saniya Rivers and Milaysia Fulwiley left as well. Both made the right decision.
Not sure I agree with this. Current guards that have come through Dawn's coaching that have improved big time or thrived in the pros:South Carolina has a very spotty track record when it comes to guard development. Saniya Rivers and Milaysia Fulwiley left as well. Both made the right decision.
And Cooper leaving might be the best thing for the program. She left South Carolina first… and why would you leave a program at or near the top every year, with an established record of putting players in the WNBA? Only two reasons: a) you didn’t want to attend class and graduate (Dawn’s rule), or b) you wanted more minutes up front than most freshmen and sophomores get in the South Carolina system, and weren’t willing to pay your dues.
And if Cooper is that type of “me first” player, UT should let her go and start fresh. The teams in the Final Four all have great team chemistry. The players who transferred into those programs were willing to buy into the culture of winning (see: Latson).