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Media Picks Gamecocks for 2022 SEC Women's Basketball Title
Women's Basketball  . 

Media Picks Gamecocks for 2022 SEC Women's Basketball Title

Boston, Cooke grab Preseason All-SEC honors

COLUMBIA, S.C. – AP Preseason No. 1 South Carolina was picked by a panel of SEC and national media members to win the 2022 Southeastern Conference women’s basketball title, the league office released today. It marks the sixth time in the last eight seasons the group has predicted the Gamecocks as regular-season champion. The media tapped juniors Aliyah Boston and Zia Cooke for Preseason All-SEC honors with Boston receiving votes for Preseason Player of the Year as well.
 
South Carolina has won five SEC regular-season championships since claiming its first in 2013-14. The Gamecocks won the 2019-20 SEC Regular-Season crown after posting their second 16-0 league record, ending a two-year stretch of second-place finishes. Head coach Dawn Staley’s team has not finished lower than second since the 2012-13 campaign.
 
Staley’s 16-woman roster features five seniors with at least three years in the program and five juniors among the full 11-player roster from last season’s NCAA Final squad returning to the Garnet and Black. Boston and Cooke often grab the headlines, but the Gamecocks are three-deep at every position and feature 10 former McDonald’s All-Americans. The 2021 postseason saw the SEC leader in assists Destanni Henderson bring in SEC Tournament All-Tournament honors and senior Victaria Saxton and Laeticia Amihere grab spots on the NCAA Hemisfair Region All-Tournament Team. Among the five newcomers are the reigning ACC Freshman and Defensive Player of the Year Kamilla Cardoso, Naismith High School Player of the Year Raven Johnson, USA Today High School National Player of the Year Saniya Rivers, Naismith High School First-Team All-American Sania Feagin and Ohio Miss Basketball Bree Hall.
 
After claiming National Player of the Year honors from The Athletic last season, Boston is back for her third season as a Gamecock. The two-time Lisa Leslie Award winner averages a career double-double overall (13.1 ppg, 10.4 rpg), in SEC games (13.2 ppg, 11.3 rpg) and in 28 games against ranked opponents (13.7 ppg, 11.5 rpg). A unanimous First-Team All-American and the only player named a finalist for both the Naismith Trophy and Naismith Defensive Player of the Year last season, she was 13th in the NCAA in rebounding average (11.5), 18th in blocks per game (2.6) and fifth in double-doubles (17). Boston already ranks eighth in program history in career double-doubles (30) and fifth in blocked shots (167). Her 16 career double-doubles in SEC play are third-best in program history.
 
Cooke capped a solid sophomore season with NCAA Hemisfair Region Most Outstanding Player honors and earning a spot on the Final Four All-Tournament Team. She was an honorable mention All-American and a first-team All-SEC selection after leading the team and ranking 12th in the SEC in scoring (15.9 ppg). She scored in double figures in 27 of the team’s 31 games, including six 20-point outings, including a sterling 25-point outing in the Final Four that included 5-of-8 shooting from 3-point range.
 
The 2021-22 Gamecocks officially open the season on the road at AP Preseason No. 5 NC State on Tue., Nov. 9, on ESPN. South Carolina’s first home game is set for Wed., Nov. 17, against in-state rival Clemson.
 
Fans interested in buying season tickets for the Gamecocks’ 2021-22 season can find more information at https://thegamecockclub.com/wbb/ or by calling the South Carolina Athletics Ticket Office at 1-800-4SC-FANS (472-3267).
 
Stay tuned to GamecocksOnline.com and the team’s social media accounts (@GamecockWBB) for more information on the 2021-22 season ahead.


2022 SEC Preseason Media Poll
1.    South Carolina
2.    Tennessee
3.    Texas A&M
4.    Kentucky
5.    Georgia
6.    Arkansas
7.    LSU
8.    Ole Miss
9.    Mississippi State
10.  Alabama
11.  Missouri
12.  Florida
13.  Auburn
14.  Vanderbilt

Preseason Player of the Year
Rhyne Howard, Kentucky
 
Preseason All-SEC
Rhyne Howard, Kentucky
Khayla Pointer, LSU
Shakira Austin, Ole Miss
Aliyah Boston, South Carolina
Zia Cooke, South Carolina