Women’s Basketball Hall of Famer Nikki McCray-Penson, 51, dies

McCray-Penson starred for the Lady Vols in the 1990s in her native state of Tennessee before playing in the ABL and WNBA and later becoming a college basketball head coach.

She served as an assistant women’s basketball coach last season for Rutgers, which confirmed her death. The cause of death has not been announced. McCray-Penson and her husband, Thomas Penson, have a son, Thomas Jr., who turned 10 in February.

McCray-Penson was diagnosed with breast cancer in November 2013, during her tenure with South Carolina, where she was an assistant to her close friend and Olympic teammate Dawn Staley. She was part of Staley’s staff as the Gamecocks won the 2017 NCAA championship. Soon after, she took her first head-coaching job, with Old Dominion.

In all, including last season at Rutgers, McCray-Penson had 16 years of college coaching experience, serving as head coach at Mississippi State and ODU. After consecutive 20-win seasons, she left the Monarchs to take over the Bulldogs, who went 10-9 during the COVID-19-impacted 2020-2021 season. In October 2021, before the start of what would have been her second season at MSU, she stepped down to focus on her health.

She returned to coaching this past season, becoming an assistant to Coquese Washington at Rutgers.

“Heart hurts like crazy over this one,” two-time WNBA MVP and Las Vegas Aces standout A’ja Wilson, star of South Carolina’s 2017 title team, wrote on Twitter. “Such a fighter and a warrior with the sweetest gentle soul! Coach McCray you’ve helped me in many, many ways and you were a true gift from God! Truly will be missed! No more suffering, no more pain! God got a good one.”

A native of Collierville, Tennessee, McCray-Penson helped the Lady Vols win three SEC regular-season championships and two SEC tournament titles. They also made a women’s Final Four appearance in 1995, when Tennessee fell in the championship game to Connecticut.

McCray-Penson was then named to the U.S. national team, which trained and toured together from fall 1995 until the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta. That U.S. team’s popularity and success was seen as the springboard to the launch of the WNBA in 1997, and was chronicled in the ESPN 30 for 30 special “Dream On,” which was released last year.

“Our hearts are heavy as we learn of the passing of Nikki McCray-Penson,” the WNBA said in a statement. “… Our thoughts and prayers are with Nikki’s family and loved ones at this time.”

McCray-Penson was a three-time All-Star during her nine years in the WNBA and won gold medals with Team USA in the 1996 and 2000 Summer Olympics.

“We are heartbroken to hear this news,” Indiana Fever general manager Lin Dunn said on Twitter. “Nikki was a part of our first Fever playoff team; our thoughts and prayers go out to her family.”

McCray-Penson also led the Columbus Quest to the 1997 ABL championship, as she played in that league before moving to the WNBA. She was the ABL’s MVP in 1997.

“Nikki was a tremendous competitor,” Brian Agler, who coached McCray-Penson with the Quest, told ESPN. “She could dominate a game with her defensive abilities and her aggressive offensive style. She had such a tremendous work ethic. I know her Columbus Quest family, friends and fans respect her and will miss her.”

She was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2012.

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