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Antwainette Walker Dawn Staley Award Art

Women's Basketball Alex Morgan, EKU Athletics Communications

Antwainette Walker Named to Dawn Staley Award Late Season Watch List

PHILADELPHIA – Eastern Kentucky University women's basketball guard Antwainette Walker is one of 14 players featured on the late season watch list for the 2023 Dawn Staley Award, announced by The Phoenix Club of Philadelphia on Tuesday morning.
 
The annual honor is given to a player who exemplifies the skills that Coach Staley possessed during her playing career. The nod marks Walker's first tab to the award late season watch list in her four-year career.
 
Walker, a Lisle, Ill. native, who was also listed on the mid-season top-10 for the 2023 Ann Meyers Drysdale Award through the National Basketball Hall of Fame and the WBCA, leads EKU averaging 21.1 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 2.4 steals per game.
 
Antwainette has recorded 24 straight games in double-figure scoring, 13 of those contests have been with 20-or-more points and 10-or-more rebounds. 
 
She sits at sixth in the country in made field goals (206) and top-20 in the NCAA in double-doubles (14), points (506), and points per game (21.1). She leads the ASUN Conference in over 10 statistical categories.
 
Walker needs 12 points to move into 8th in EKU program history in single season points at 517.
 
The Dawn Staley Award 2023 Candidates
Caitlin Clark – Iowa
Ashley Joens – Iowa State
Haley Jones – Stanford
Diamond Johnson – North Carolina State
Zia Cooke – South Carolina
Olivia Miles – Notre Dame
Gabby Gregory – Kansas State
Hailey Van Lith – Louisville
Antwainette Walker – Eastern Kentucky 
Keishana Washington – Drexel
Lou Lopez Senechal – UConn
Ta'Niya Latson – Florida State
Alex Morris – LSU
Dyaisha Fair – Syracuse 
 
About Dawn Staley
Dawn Staley was born and raised in North Philadelphia where she graduated from Dobbins Tech High School. Dawn led the Mustangs to three public league championships, while earning USA today's national high school player of the year in 1988.
 
She went on to a four-year career at the University of Virginia that featured three trips to the NCAA Final Four, including a championship game appearance in 1991 after which she was named Most Outstanding Player. A two-time National Player of the Year (1991, 1992) and three-time Kodak All-American (1990, 1991, and 1992), Staley was the ACC Player of the Year in 1991 and 1992 and the league's Rookie of the Year in 1989. Finishing her career as the only player in ACC history to record more than 2,000 points, 700 rebounds, 700 assists and 400 steals, Staley is one of three players at Virginia to have her jersey retired. She was named to the ACC's 50th Anniversary Women's Basketball Team in 2002 and earned a spot on ESPN's "Top Players of the Past 25 Years." In April 2008, she was inducted into the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.
 
On the international scene, Staley made her first appearance in a USA Basketball uniform as a member of the 1989 Junior World Championship Team and 15 years later played her final international game after helping the organization to a 196-10 record. Olympic gold medals in 1996, 2000 and 2004 highlight her collection of 10 gold medals and one bronze on the world stage.
 
Following the 1996 Olympic Games, Staley joined the Richmond Rage of the ABL, one of two women's basketball professional leagues started in the wake of USA Basketball's success on the world stage. After two all-star seasons with the organization, she switched leagues, signing with the WNBA's Charlotte Sting in 1999. Including the 2005 and 2006 seasons with the Houston Comets, Staley played in the WNBA All-Star game five times and was the first player in league history to represent both the East and West teams during her career. A member of the WNBA's All-Decade Team, as selected by a panel of national and WNBA-market media as well as the league's players and coaches, Staley twice earned the Kim Perrot Sportsmanship Award (1999, 2006) and won the WNBA Entrepreneurial Spirit Award in 1999. Following her retirement from the league, the WNBA began awarding the Dawn Staley Community Leadership Award in 2007, honoring the player who best exemplifies the characteristics of a leader in the community in which she works or lives.
 
Dawn became the head women's basketball coach at Temple University in 2000, where in eight years she compiled 172 wins and four Atlantic 10 championships and six NCAA appearances.
 
Dawn became the head women's basketball coach at the University of South Carolina in 2008, where in six years she has compiled 121 wins with four NCAA Appearances.
 
Dawn was enshrined (2012) in the Women's Basketball of Fame. She was also enshrined in the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in September, 2013. In 2015, Dawn's South Carolina Gamecocks won the regular and SEC Tournament Championships and guided her team to the school's first ever Final Four appearance, while earning SEC Coach of Year.
 
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Players Mentioned

Antwainette Walker

#13 Antwainette Walker

G/F
5' 11"
Redshirt Senior

Players Mentioned

Antwainette Walker

#13 Antwainette Walker

5' 11"
Redshirt Senior
G/F