Can we just fill this room with thank you thank you đđžđđžđđž
Aubrey and Kaitlyn next IM NOT PLAYING.
FORMER? FORMER UCONN STAR? BRO đ
juju pls come back we miss you đđđđ
Lynx really said âeveryone on paigeâ thatâs itâ thatâs the game planâ
oh this ATE.
free palestine carrd đľđ¸ decolonize palestine site đľđ¸ how you can help palestine | FREE PALESTINE!
MASTERLIST
á° đ°đ¨đŤđ đđ¨đŽđ§đ | 7.7k
á° đŹđŽđŚđŚđđŤđ˛ | she was born to be greatâlegacy inked in her blood, she was a taurasi. committing to usc was supposed to be her moment, her name, her story. but this is juju watkins' court. and kingdoms donât like to be threatened.
á° đ°đđŤđ§đ˘đ§đ đŹ | competitive tension, mentions of injuries, slow burn dynamics, rivals-to-something-much-messier, media speculation, college basketball politics... this is only part one to the lay the works for the next two parts
á° đđ'đ đđđđđ | listen. i just wanted to write about what happens when you throw two untouchable girls into the same gym and force them to coexist. this is about power, perception, and the kind of obsession you canât quite name. itâs loud games and quiet bus rides. itâs two stars learning they shine brightest side by side.
You were born into greatness before you even had the language to name it.
The first thing you ever held was a mini basketball, your tiny hands clumsily wrapped around its worn leather like it had always belonged there. Your baby photos werenât in soft pastelsâthey were draped in UConn blue and white, your motherâs old jersey hung behind you like a crown you hadnât earned but would eventually grow into. You took your first steps on a basketball court. Learned your first words in locker rooms. The sharp scent of sweat, rubber soles, and Gatorade became as familiar to you as lullabies.
You were Diana Taurasiâs daughter. And that meant something.
Even when you were too young to understand the weight of it, other people did. They looked at you and saw potential. Expectation. In the eyes of coaches, scouts, fansâyou werenât just a kid. You were a blueprint. A second coming.
And you never got the chance to be anything else.
You were in second grade the first time someone referred to you as a âproblemâ on the courtâmeant as a compliment, of course. You dropped twenty-four points in an AAU game filled with girls four years older than you. By middle school, Gatorade was sponsoring youth events you headlined. By high school, you were trending every time you laced up. A walking headline. A phenom. A legacy in progress.
You didnât just play basketball. You were basketball.
There was a calm that came with it. A clarity. You didnât feel the pressure like other people expected you to. You felt something closer to instinct. The game spoke to you in a language you were born fluent inâcuts, passes, screens, shot clocks. It pulsed through your veins like memory. And your motherâyour mother made sure you never coasted.
Diana Taurasi wasnât just your mom. She was your coach, your mentor, your mirror. Brutally honest. Ferociously protective. She never let you fall for your own hype. Never let you take the easy road. You had to earn every point, every compliment, every step forward.
But stillâthere was no denying it.
You were that girl.
The number one recruit in the country for the 2024-25 season. The most scouted, most talked-about, most coveted player in womenâs basketball. Some analysts said you were bigger than Cooper Flagg, more valuable, more marketable. Others called you a unicorn. A guard with a forwardâs strength, a forward with a point guardâs court vision. You had Dianaâs fire, but your own flavor of finesse. And you knew how to sell it. NIL deals rolled in before you turned seventeenâNike, Beats, Gatorade, even a short documentary on your life that ESPN dropped during your senior year.
You didnât ask to be the face of a movement. But you didnât shy away from it, either.
They called you the princess of basketball. Not because you were soft. But because you were born in the castle and never once questioned whether or not you belonged.
Every program in the country wanted you. Coaches fawned. Analysts speculated. Your name was in every headline, your stats on every screen. Everyoneâeveryoneâassumed you were going to UConn. How could you not? It was written in your blood. Your momâs legacy was carved into the walls of Gampel Pavilion. Geno called you his âbasketball granddaughterâ before you could spell his name. You grew up running through their tunnels, watching legends take the court, dreaming in shades of blue.
But dreams change. Or maybe yours were never really yours to begin with.
Because when decision day came, you chose USC.
And the world? Imploded.
Headlines hit within seconds.
âTAURASIâS DAUGHTER SHOCKS BASKETBALL WORLD.â
âNUMBER ONE PROSPECT SNUBS UCONN.â
âPRINCESS TURNS REBEL.â
Everyone wanted a reason. Everyone needed an explanation. But it wasnât complicated.
You didnât want to inherit a legacy. You wanted to build one.
UConn wouldâve been the safe path. The linear one. The predictable one. But you were never interested in repeating history. You were interested in rewriting it.
And USCâthe City of Angels, the rebirth of West Coast basketballâwas the place where you could do that.
Because LA offered you more than a court. It offered you a chance to step outside of your motherâs shadow, to start fresh, to make people see you for who you really were, not just who you were born to.
And maybe, deep down, it wasnât just about legacy.
Maybe it was also about control. About owning your narrative before someone else could spin it for you.
You showed up to campus with cameras waiting. Your arrival was treated like the second coming. You werenât a freshmanâyou were an icon in training. The team photographers caught you walking into Galen Center in a fresh pair of white and crimson Kobe 6s, your curls slicked back, diamond studs catching the California sun. The post went viral in under an hour.
âSheâs here.â
âItâs over for the rest of the NCAA.â
âUConn fumbled the bag.â
People were already talking about championships. About rivalries. About changing the landscape of womenâs college hoops.
But none of the buzz fazed you.
Youâd been watched your whole life. You knew how to turn that into power. Stillâthere was one thing you hadnât accounted for.
You werenât the only star in town. And Juju Watkins? She wasnât about to hand over the keys to her kingdom without a fight.
When people thought of USC womenâs basketball, they thought of Juju Watkins.
It wasnât up for debate. It wasnât a question or a maybe or a footnote. It was fact. She was the headline, the face, the foundation. The hometown hero who chose to stay, to build, to bet on herself when everyone else was chasing dynasties across the country. She was the one who said no to UConn and South Carolina and Stanford and carved her own path under the California sun. And she was proud of that. She should be proud of that.
Because she didnât just help put USC back on the map.
She was the map.
The jersey sales, the packed home games, the national coverage, the buzzâthe heat that hadnât touched USC in decadesâit all started with her. She was a one-woman revolution in a bun and Kobe kicks, an LA native who brought cameras and fans and credibility back to the Galen Center.
And she worked for it. Every inch.
No one handed her anything.
She didnât have a last name that made people bow. She wasnât born into legend. She earned her way hereâthrough sweat, and pressure, and expectation so loud it nearly drowned her more than once. And even now, with her name etched into the culture of this team, with her photos plastered on every poster and promo, she still didnât feel safe.
Not when you were coming.
She saw the rumors online before she believed them. Saw your name floated in interviews, message boards, pre-season speculation. Everyone thought youâd go to UConn. It made sense. You were Diana Taurasiâs daughter, after all. Basketball royalty. UConn blue practically ran in your blood. But then the decision came, and it broke across social media like a crack of thunder.
You picked USC.
And everything shifted.
Juju was scrolling Twitter when she saw the official commitment post. A photo of you in cardinal and gold, arms folded over your chest, looking like you already owned the place. The caption was something cockyâsomething short, like legacy starts now or chapter oneâand the likes exploded in real time.
At first, Juju just stared. Blinked. Read it again.
Then she threw her phone across the bed and laughed.
Not because it was funny. But because what else could she do?
You were coming here. To her house. To the team she rebuilt from the ground up. And she already knew what was going to happen next. All the headlines. The endless comparisons. The whispers that thisâyouâwas the beginning of a new era.
As if she was already yesterdayâs news. As if she hadnât fought tooth and nail to give USC its identity back.
She hated it. Hated the way your name lingered on everyoneâs tongue like some kind of prophecy. Hated how you were treated like the second coming of womenâs basketball when she wasnât even done writing her own story yet.
Most of all, she hated how easy it all seemed for you.
Juju watched your highlight tapes obsessively. More than she was willing to admit. Alone, late at night, headphones in. Sheâd scroll through hours of clipsâAAU, USA Basketball, random TikTok editsâand sheâd try to find the cracks. The flaws. Something she could use to tell herself you werenât as good as they said.
But there werenât any.
You were that good.
And that was the worst part.
You werenât just hype. You werenât just legacy and bloodline and pretty branding. You were legit. You moved like a proâfluid, confident, calculated. Your handle was filthy. Your jumper, clean. You read defenses like they were written in bold font. And your passing game? That pissed her off the most. It was unselfish. As if the game didnât revolve around you, even though everyone treated it like it did.
You were the kind of player who made the court look small.
And Juju knew what that meant. It meant she had a problem.
Because now she had to fight for her spot on her own team.
This wasnât high school anymore. It wasnât a one-woman show. She wasnât going to get by on name recognition or local loyalty. There was another star on the roster now. And not just any star. The star. And no matter how hard Juju tried to downplay it, the truth kept showing up in her chest like a bruise she couldnât ignore.
They werenât just making room for you. They were rearranging things for you.
The trainers. The media staff. Even the coachesâCoach Gottlieb hadnât said anything directly, but Juju could feel it. The careful balancing act. The subtle shifts in tone. The way they said your name like a promise.
It made her stomach twist.
It made her wake up earlier. Stay later. Work harder.
Not because she wanted to impress anyone. But because she wasnât about to get pushed out of her own kingdom.
Sheâd bled for this team. Sheâd sacrificed for this team. Sheâd become the face of the program when no one else believed it could be done. And now everyone wanted to forget?
She wasnât going to let that happen.
So yeahâshe watched you. Studied you. Tracked your movements in every practice, every drill, every media appearance. Not out of admiration. Out of necessity. Because if she didnât, sheâd get left behind. Replaced. Reduced to a co-star in your story when she hadnât even finished writing her own.
And maybe, just maybe, that obsession came with something sharper. Something deeper. Something she didnât want to name just yet.
Because every time she looked at youâcool and collected, already being adored by everyone around youâshe didnât just see a rival.
She saw a mirror. A threat. A spark.
And she wasnât sure which one scared her more.
--
You told them over dinner.
Not in a dramatic way, not with some big announcement or a video reveal or anything even close to that. Just the three of youâyour mom, Diana, her wife, Penny, and youâsitting around the table in the backyard of your Arizona house. The kind of night where the sun stretched out long, warm and pink across the horizon, the cicadas were already singing, and the grill still smelled like steak and vegetables.
Youâd been quiet most of the meal. Not tense, just⌠focused. Waiting for the right moment. Youâd known what you were going to say for daysâmaybe even weeks. It had been building in you like a tide, inevitable. But knowing didnât make saying it any easier.
Penny was the one who asked, voice soft and casual as she leaned back in her chair, wine glass balanced in her hand. âSo, babe⌠whereâs your head at with schools?â
You looked across the table at them. Diana, in her usual tank top and slides, her expression unreadable. Penny, barefoot, relaxed, but always watching closely. You pushed a piece of grilled zucchini around your plate for a second. Then you said it.
âIâm committing to USC.â
Diana blinked.
Penny smiled, almost immediately. âUSC, huh? Thatâs excitingâLA, sunshine, staying West Coast. Great coaching staff. Good program.â
Diana still hadnât moved.
You watched her fork freeze midair, hanging over her plate. She blinked again, slower this time, like maybe her brain was buffering. Then she set the fork down.
âUSC?â she repeated, voice flat. âAs in⌠the Trojans?â
You nodded once. âYeah. I already talked to Coach Gottlieb. Iâm sending my papers in tomorrow.â
It was quiet.
Penny sipped her wine. Diana didnât say anything, just stared at you. You could practically hear her thoughts. You werenât surprised, not really. Youâd been bracing for this since the idea of USC first came into focus. Since the first whispers of doing something differentâyour thingâstarted to bloom.
Diana leaned back in her chair, crossing her arms. âSo what happened to UConn? You know, you already have your spot on the team, Geno promised.â
You shrugged. âItâs not what I want.â
âAnd Stanford?â she asked, voice sharp now. âSouth Carolina? Notre Dame? You literally have offers from every top ten school. Every. Single. One.â
âI know.â
She scoffed. âSo explain to me how you ended up choosing USC like itâs not a massive downgrade.â
âDiââ Penny warned gently.
âNo,â Diana cut in, eyes still locked on you. âIâm serious. I need her to say it. Because it sounds a lot like sheâs throwing away every advantage sheâs got to go be on a rebuilding team forâwhat? A vibe? Sunshine and Instagram opportunities?â
âItâs not about that,â you said quietly. âItâs about making something mine.â
Diana didnât laugh, but she might as well have. The sound she made was dry, almost bitter. âYou have something thatâs yours. Your name, your talent, your futureâall of it. And you really think going to USC is gonna make people forget youâre my kid?â
You stared at her. âThatâs not what I want.â
âThen what do you want?â
âI want to be great,â you said, firm now. âI want to win. But I donât want to do it where people are already expecting me to. I want to do it somewhere I chose. Not somewhere that was handed to me because of you.â
The table went quiet again. Penny reached over and placed a hand gently on Dianaâs forearm.
âSheâs not trying to disrespect you,â Penny said softly.
But Diana wasnât even angry. Not really. She looked almost hurt. Or maybe confused. Like she was staring at a stranger wearing your face.
âI get it,â she said finally, low and tight. âYou donât want to follow in my footsteps. You want your own lane.â
You nodded. âExactly.â
Diana sighed and ran a hand through her hair. âLook, you know I respect USC. I do. But they donât have a championship pedigree. They donât have the infrastructure. If you really want to build something from the ground up, then go to Arizona. Hell, go to UCLA. At least those would make sense.â
Penny smiled behind her glass. âYouâre negotiating now?â
âSheâs not thinking it through.â
âI have thought it through,â you snapped. âIâve thought about it more than anything in my entire life.â
Diana just looked at you, and for a second, it felt like you were ten years old again, after a bad game, standing at the free-throw line in the driveway while she drilled you on your form until the sun went down.
Then she exhaled, leaned forward, and said, âFine.â
You blinked. âFine?â
âBut if youâre going to USC,â she said, voice suddenly sharper, âyouâre going to do it like a Taurasi.â
You held her gaze.
âYouâre not going there to participate. Youâre not going there to be cute. Youâre going there to win. And not just gamesâI mean finals. National championships. I donât care if youâre a freshman or if youâre going up against five-star recruits. You go there, you better drag that team into the tournament and you better make it count. Or itâs a waste.â
There was a pause.
And then you smiled. A small one. The kind that came from somewhere deep in your chest.
âOkay,â you said. âDeal.â
She nodded once. âThen I donât want to hear any complaints when youâre waking up at 5 a.m. every day for two-a-days and youâve got cameras in your face asking why you didnât go to UConn.â
âI wonât complain,â you said.
âYou better not,â she muttered, but her voice had softened.
Penny looked between the two of you and shook her head. âGod, you two are the same.â
Neither of you denied it.
Because you were. In ways you couldnât run from, even if you tried.
You were Dianaâs daughter through and through. The sharp edge. The attitude. The refusal to do anything halfway. And when she threw down that challenge, that line in the sand, it didnât scare you.
It thrilled you.
You were going to USC. And now, you were going to prove that you could do exactly what she said.
Because making it to the finals wasnât a request.
It was a promise.
--
Thereâs something about first impressions.
You know how they say donât judge a book by its cover, but thatâs exactly what everyone doesâespecially in womenâs basketball, where reputation walks into the room before you do.
And yours?
Yours has been following you like a shadow since the moment you could dribble.
So when you showed up to Galen Center on the first day of summer workouts, it wasnât just an arrival. It was a statement.
You stepped onto that court like it was already yours.
Custom Jordan 1s in USC colors, trimmed with metallic gold laces. Dutch braids tight and glossy, edges laid, diamond studs catching the light. Oversized vintage Nike tee tucked into black USC practice shorts. The look was casual, effortlessâbut make no mistake, it was curated. You werenât just the new recruit.
You were the moment.
The gym buzzed when you walked in. Heads turned. Conversations paused mid-sentence. Girls nudged each other subtly, stealing glances over their water bottles. Someone whispered your name like a prayer. A few others just stared like they couldnât believe you were real. That sheâbasketballâs golden child, Diana Taurasiâs legacyâwas actually here.
You didnât smile.
Not because you were being rude, but because you didnât need to. You let the silence stretch a little. Let it settle.
Own the room first. Be friendly later, thatâs what Diana always said.
Coach Gottlieb was already making her way toward you, clipboard in hand, eyes bright and slightly nervousâlike she knew she had something valuable in her hands and didnât want to drop it.
âWelcome to USC,â she said, offering her hand, and you shook it with a firm grip, your expression unreadable.
âIâm excited to be here,â you replied smoothly, voice low, even.
And you were. You meant it.
The rest of the staff followedâassistant coaches, trainers, strength coaches. They all greeted you like royalty. Like this was the day theyâd been waiting for, the shift theyâd been promised. You could feel it in the way their eyes lingered too long, in the way their smiles tightened when they spoke. The expectation was heavy. But it didnât scare you.
You were used to it.
Youâd been molded in the spotlight.
Still, even as you let them usher you toward the team, subtly placing you at the center of the gym, you felt her before you saw her.
That heat. That edge.
That silent resistance.
Juju Watkins stood off to the side, arms crossed, chewing on a piece of gum like she was watching a movie sheâd seen before and already hated the ending.
She didnât smile. Didnât wave. Didnât move a muscle.
Just stared at you with a look that could slice glass. And for the first time that day, you felt your pulse jump.
You turned your body slightly, acknowledging her. Nothing obvious. Just a glance. A barely-there curve of your mouth. A flicker of something beneath your lashes.
Juju didnât flinch.
Didnât acknowledge the coaches still circling you like satellites. Didnât bother with the whispered conversations or the teammates already inching toward you like moths to a flame.
Her energy was solid. Grounded. Unimpressed.
And God, you liked it.
It fed something in you. Pulled the thread tighter.
Because everyone else had already folded. Theyâd smiled too wide. Said too much. Laughed too loud. They wanted to be close to you, to claim you before the season even started.
But not Juju.
She didnât want to claim you. She wanted to test you.
âWatkins,â Coach Gottlieb called out, beckoning her over. âCome introduce yourself.â
Juju walked slowly, deliberately, like she was being summoned to something beneath her. Like she couldnât care less.
She stopped in front of you, hands on her hips, her expression unreadable.
You extended your hand, polite. Calm.
She looked at it for a beat too long before finally shaking it. Her grip was firm. Just like yours.
âIâve seen your highlights,â she said, voice flat.
âIâve seen yours too,â you replied.
âYouâre good.â
âSo are you.â
Another pause. Neither of you smiled.
The gym was too quiet. Everyone else was watching like it was a live broadcastâlike if they blinked, theyâd miss the exact moment everything shifted.
Because it had.
Right there, in that subtle, loaded exchange.
She didnât bow. She didnât bend.
And you loved that.
Because if this season was going to be a warâand you already knew it would beâyou didnât want people behind you. You wanted someone standing across from you, sharp and hungry.
âYou came here for the spotlight,â she said, still looking you dead in the eye.
âI came here to win.â
Jujuâs jaw tightened just a little. Then she stepped back.
âThen I hope you can handle the heat.â
You smiled then. Not big. Just enough.
âI grew up in Phoenix,â you said. âI am the heat.â
A few girls nearby muttered, one of them letting out a soft, âDamn.â
Coach clapped her hands, trying to cut the tension with forced cheer. âAlright, alright! Letâs get this practice started.â
Juju turned and walked back toward her side of the court without another word.
And you followed, just a step behind, already measuring the distance between you.
Not to catch up. But to compete.
Because if she wanted this team to be hers, sheâd have to earn it the same way you always had. By going through you.
The gym was thick with the scent of rubber soles and sweat and adrenaline.
Summer practice meant no fans in the stands, no cameras, no bright lightsâjust the brutal honesty of open court under high ceilings and fluorescent lights. Coaches watched from the sidelines, arms crossed, clipboards held to their chests like shields. The rest of the team had spread out along the baseline, hydrating and whispering, but their eyes stayed locked on you and Juju. Everyone was watching.
It had started off civil.
A few plays in, no one had said much. You took a threeâclean, efficient, net barely moved. Juju answered with a drive, weaving through two defenders, finishing off the glass. It was back and forth. Electric. Mutual respect in motion.
But then things shifted.
It happened in the second rotation, when the scrimmage flipped and Coach had you both guarding each other.
And Jujuâs mouth opened.
âCute shot,â she muttered, brushing your shoulder with hers as she passed. âLetâs see you try it with pressure this time.â
You blinked.
That was⌠new.
Youâd watched her tapes. You knew her rep. Juju wasnât loud. She didnât need to be. Her game was usually enough.
But now? Now she wouldnât shut up.
âLeft sideâs dead, princess. You ainât getting through there.â
âWhereâs that Taurasi footwork? Lookinâ a little slow today.â
âOh, we getting soft now? Câmon. Thatâs all you got?â
And the thing that got under your skin wasnât just the chirping.
It was that she was good. Really good.
Her defense was sticky, her hips low, her reads quick. She played like she had something to proveâand maybe she did.
Your heart thumped harder every time she bumped you. Every time her breath hit your neck. Every time she cut in front of you, fast and mean, and forced you to reset.
She was fast.
You were faster.
She was sharp.
You were sharper.
But she was playing dirty. And you liked it.
You didnât back down.
You locked her up the next play, forced her baseline, body tight against hers, your sneakers screeching against the court as she pivoted to escape you. You cut her off again. This time, she didnât get the shot off.
You felt her frustration ripple like heat off her body.
âYou reaching now?â she barked, eyes narrowing. âGonna need more than your last name to stop me.â
Your grin was slow. âGood. I was getting bored.â
But inside, your blood was pumping like bass through a speaker.
You were not bored. Not even close.
This was not how it was supposed to go.
This gymâher gymâused to be silent when she moved. Used to breathe when she did. She built this place from the ground up. She made USC a name again. She chose it when no one else would, when people asked why she wasnât going East, when they begged her to ride someone elseâs legacy. She stayed. She led.
And now she was being overshadowed in her own house.
By you.
Diana Taurasiâs daughter. The golden child.
She hated how easy it looked for you. How clean your handles were. How smooth your jumper was. How you moved like the floor had memorized your rhythm.
You didnât even look tired.
You were laughing, talking shit back. Like this was some kind of game.
But Juju knew better. This wasnât a game. This was war.
Because you werenât here to play second. You werenât here to learn from her. You came to take her spot, whether you said it out loud or not.
And worst of all?
You were good enough to do it. She hated that more than anything.
By the third quarter of scrimmage, your jersey was sticking to your skin and your legs were starting to ache in the way that meant you were workingânot for cardio, not for endurance, but for dominance.
Juju was right there, still glued to your hip, still yapping, still refusing to break. Her loose ponytail swished behind her as she moved, jaw clenched, sneakers relentless on the hardwood.
âShe donât pass, huh?â she called out mid-play, just loud enough for the others to hear. âGuess thatâs what happens when youâre used to being the favorite.â
You spun on the drive, caught her slipping for half a second, and rose for the jumperâelbow high, wrist flick perfect.
Swish.
âMaybe if you kept your mouth closed,â you muttered as you jogged back, âyouâd hear the whistle next time.â
The sidelines erupted with half-laughs, oohs, and fake coughs.
You were both breathing heavy now, chest to chest as the ball reset.
Jujuâs voice dropped low as she leaned in for the next possession. âDonât think I donât see what youâre doing.â
You looked her dead in the eyes. âGood. I want you to see it.â
The ball snapped back into play.And there you were again.
Two stars burning too close. Too fast.
Her footwork was beautiful, all twitch muscle and timing, cutting angles like sheâd drawn them herself. You matched it with precision. Hands up. Feet planted. You were reading her eyes now.
She was reading yours, too.
No one else on the court mattered anymore. The game had collapsed into the two of you, trading buckets and barbs, like this was all just a prelude to something bigger. Deeper.
By the final buzzer, your arms were burning. Your lungs, raw.
But so was your heart.
Because that tension? That unspoken current between you?
It wasnât just rivalry. It was obsession. And neither of you had even scratched the surface of what it meant yet.
--
The next couple of weeks were harder than anything you expected.
And it wasnât the drills. It wasnât the lifting sessions or the playbook or the sweltering summer heat rising off the gym floor in waves.
It was her.
Juju.
She was everywhere. She was in your space, in your face, in your head.
Youâd never had a teammate like her beforeâsomeone who didnât just match your energy, but challenged it. Someone who pushed back. Who called you out. Who didnât give a damn about your name or your highlight reel or the fact that Diana Taurasi was your mother.
Juju didnât treat you like royalty. She treated you like a threat.
And you hated it. Hated the way she barked at you on defense like you werenât doing enough. Hated the way she boxed you out with unnecessary force, like she was trying to send a message. Hated that she never gave you even a sliver of praiseânever nodded, never smiled, never gave an inch.
You hated that she acted like you didnât deserve to be here. And most of allâyou hated how deep down, some part of you didnât feel totally sure that you did.
Because this was the first time in your life you were sharing the court with someone who felt like a mirror. Someone who wanted it just as bad. Someone who could match you. Someone who reminded you that greatness wasnât owed.
It had to be taken.
And that kind of pressure? It cracked things open.
You didnât notice how bad it had gotten until that Thursday.
It was mid-scrimmageâfive-on-five, game tied, coaches silent on the sidelines. You were running the wing, fast break after a turnover, and the ball hit your hands like lightning. You barely slowed your momentum as you cut in for the layup, extending toward the glass with your left.
And thenâimpact.
A hard shove. Not enough to break bone, but enough to throw your angle off, enough to send you stumbling into the padding beneath the basket.
You hit it with a grunt, palms catching your fall, knees scraping the floor.
Whistles blew, and the gym fell into a hush.
You pushed yourself up slowly, chest heaving, and turned around.
Juju was standing a few feet behind you, chest puffed, hands on hips, not even pretending to look sorry.
Your jaw clenched.
âAre you serious?â you snapped, loud enough for everyone to hear.
âIt was an accident,â she bit back, already rolling her eyes.
âBullshit.â
âYou cut into the lane late,â Juju added to the coach, but her eyes never left yours. âWasnât my fault you canât finish through contact.â
The dig sliced clean through your composure. You stepped forward.
âFinish through contact?â you echoed, voice rising. âYou shoved me. Youâre not slick. Youâve been doing this passive-aggressive shit since the day I got here.â
âYeah?â Juju said, stepping toward you now. âMaybe if you earned your minutes instead of walking in like you own the place, youâd get some respect.â
You felt something crack.
âRespect?â you repeated. âYou think I donât earn my shit? You think just âcause my last name is Taurasi, I get handed everything?â
She shrugged, smirking. âIf the shoe fits, princess.â
You took another step forward.
âSay that again.â
âWhy? You gonna call Mommy to defend you?â
The breath you took was sharp, chest tight, heat blooming under your skin like fire.
âYou donât know the first thing about me,â you hissed. âYou donât know what Iâve had to prove just to exist in this sport without people saying itâs all because of her.â
âWell guess what,â Juju snapped. âThis is my team. My court. I built this. I bled for it. And you? Youâre just here to make headlines.â
âThen guard me better,â you spit.
âThen play better.â
The gym was deadly silent.
No one moved. No one breathed.
The two of you stood nose-to-nose, fire in your eyes, fists half-curled at your sides like you werenât entirely sure what came next.
And then Coachâs voice cut through like thunder.
âHEY!â
Both your heads snapped toward her.
She was furious. Red-faced. The veins in her neck visible.
âIâve had enough of this little pissing match.â
Neither of you said anything.
âYou two think this is cute?â she asked, voice thick with venom. âThink youâre the only stars Iâve coached? NewsflashâIâve seen plenty of talent crash and burn because they couldnât get over their damn egos.â
She stepped forward, eyes darting between the two of you.
âYou want to fight? Fight fatigue.â
She pointed to the baseline.
âBoth of you. Suicides. Until I say stop. And if either of you open your mouths again, the whole teamâs running with you.â
For a second, neither of you moved.
Your eyes locked with Jujuâs, still crackling with tension, but something else simmered underneath it now. But whatever it was, it wasnât over. Not by a long shot.
You turned first, storming to the line, jaw set, hands shaking as you settled into position.
Juju jogged beside you. You didnât look at each other.
The whistle blew.
You ran.
Back and forth. Over and over.
Sweat blurred your vision. Your lungs ached. Your shoes burned against the hardwood. Your muscles screamed. But you kept running. Because you had to.
Because you werenât going to be the one who quit first.
Not now. Not ever. Not while she was still watching.
And even as the coachâs whistle echoed through the gym, even as the rest of the team sat in awkward silence, even as the seconds ticked by like hoursâthere was only one person you were racing against.
And she was right beside you.
That night, you called your mom with your legs submerged in ice.
The dorm was quiet. Your roommate was gone for the weekend, the glow of the lamp by your bed the only light in the room. Your phone was propped against a half-drunk water bottle on your nightstand, speakerphone on as you tucked your chin into your hoodie and stared blankly at your swollen ankles.
ââand then she shoved me,â you were saying, your voice climbing with every word. âLike full-on, no regard for human life. I hit the floor so hard Iâm pretty sure my rib cage is lopsided now.â
The sound of Diana Taurasiâs laugh crackled through the phone. Dry. Sharp. Annoyingly amused.
You blinked at the ceiling. âWhy are you laughing? I couldâve died or like, torn something!â
âOh yeah,â Diana said. âBecause Juju Watkins was out there committing murder one hard foul at a time.â
âMom.â
âIâm just saying. Youâre alive. Your limbs are still attached. Youâve survived tougher.â
You pouted, even though she couldnât see you. âYou donât get it. She hates me. Like she doesnât even try to hide it.â
âThatâs because youâre a threat.â
You froze.
The silence lasted long enough that you heard her settle into what sounded like a leather couch, maybe in the living room back home. A game was playing faintly in the backgroundâprobably EuroLeague or WNBA reruns. You could imagine her perfectly: one leg thrown over the armrest, probably in sweatpants, wine glass untouched on the coffee table.
âA threat?â you repeated.
âTo her spotlight. Her ego. Her starting position.â Dianaâs voice was calm, pointed. âThis isnât new, baby. Thatâs how the NCAA is.â
You huffed, dragging your fingers through your hair.
âSheâs justâshe doesnât respect me. She talks down to me. Like I didnât earn being here.â
Diana didnât respond right away.
You waited, thinking sheâd say something soothing. Something comforting. Sheâd been like that your whole lifeâbrutally honest, yeah, but always protective. Always on your side. You expected her to say Juju was out of line, that the coaching staff needed to do a better job keeping her in check, that you were the star now and people should treat you accordingly.
Instead, what you got was: âSo what?â
You blinked. âWhat?â
âSo what if she doesnât respect you?â Diana said plainly. âWhy does that bother you so much?â
You sat there, stunned.
âBecauseââ you sputtered, ââbecause Iâve always earned my respect. I show up, I work, I win. People like me. People listen to me. Thisâthis is the first time Iâve ever had someone act like I donât belong. Like Iâm just some spoiled brat with a famous mom.â
A beat of silence.
And then: âAnd what if you are a spoiled brat with a famous mom?â
âMomââ
âIâm serious,â Diana cut in, still maddeningly calm. âWhat if thatâs what she thinks? What if the whole team thinks that? Are you gonna whine about it for the next six months, or are you gonna go get that Natty like we talked about?â
Your jaw dropped. âYouâre being so mean right now.â
âNo,â she said, voice suddenly sharper. âIâm being honest.â
And that was the first time sheâd ever said it like that.
Like she wasnât just your mom anymore. Like she was a player. A champion. A Taurasi.
âYou wanted USC,â she continued. âYou picked this path. You chose to leave UConn and LSU and Stanford on the table because you wanted to be the one who turned this program into something. You said you wanted a legacy. You said you wanted the pressure.â
You stared down at your phone, your throat dry.
âWell, baby,â she said, her voice softening just a fraction. âThis is what pressure looks like.â
You didnât respond. Not right away.
There was a silence between youâsomething weighty, not quite painful, but real. Something that made you sit up straighter and take your legs out of the bucket. You wiped them dry with a towel as your heart thudded in your chest.
Because somewhere in the middle of that call, the fog lifted.
You remembered who you were.
You werenât some freshman with big shoes to fill. You werenât just Dianaâs daughter. You werenât just a shiny new recruit with a Nike deal and a highlight tape that made grown men gasp.
You were you.
Youâd broken records before you could legally drive. Youâd played against grown women in the Olympics. Youâd stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the best of the best and dominated.
You didnât have to be liked.
You just had to win.
And if Juju was going to come for you, push you around, run her mouth?
Good.
Youâd run harder. Hit back cleaner. Score louder. And when the time cameâwhen the lights were on and the title was on the lineâsheâd see.
Theyâd all see.
You wiped your eyesâtears you hadnât even realized were building. Not sad tears. Just⌠heavy ones. Exhaustion. Frustration. A little clarity.
âThanks,â you muttered finally.
Diana chuckled. âYou done crying now?â
âI wasnât crying.â
âSure.â
You cracked the tiniest smile, pressing your phone to your chest.
âIâm gonna win it, you know,â you whispered. âIâm gonna win the whole damn thing.â
âI know,â she said.
And she meant it.
She didnât say âif.â She said when.
Because deep down, Diana had always known this day would comeâthe day you stopped playing like her daughter and started playing like yourself.
And it started here.
In a quiet dorm room, with your knees still aching and your ego a little bruised, but your vision suddenly, perfectly clear.
--
The air hangs heavy as you walk into the gym the next morning. It's not just the early heat, though it clings to the rafters like a thick curtain, but the palpable weight of yesterday.
Everyone feels it. The silence is thick enough to cut with a knife.
The upperclassmen, who witnessed the argument firsthand, avoid eye contact. The coaches, forced to end scrimmage after only twenty minutes of barely-contained hostility, wear tight-lipped expressions. And the freshmen, their eyes wide, dart between Juju and you, as if they'd just watched two titans clash.
You stride in with your usual swagger â custom Jordan slides, iced coffee clutched in your hand, the hood of your sweatshirt still shadowing your braids. But there's a new tension in your jaw, a barely leashed energy simmering beneath the surface. Your eyes sweep across the court the moment you step inside.
Juju is already there, headphones clamped over her ears, hoodie discarded, meticulously tying her shoes. She doesn't look up, doesn't acknowledge your arrival in any way.
But she knows. You both do.
Coach's whistle pierces the strained quiet the second everyone gathers.
"Alright, let's cut the shit," she declares, clipboard in one hand, the other planted firmly on her hip. "We need to talk."
The gym stills. Every movement ceases.
You lean against the baseline wall, arms crossed over your chest. Juju finally pulls off her headphones and joins the semicircle.
"I don't care if you hate each other," Coach says, her gaze sweeping between the two of you. "But what I do care about is this program. And the culture we're trying to build here."
A long, heavy pause stretches out. You can feel the heat prickling behind your ears.
"If I have to bench two of the best players in the country to make a point," Coach adds, her voice firm, "I will."
That makes everyone shift uncomfortably. Even Juju blinks, a flicker of surprise in her eyes.
"You think I won't sit you for the first game?" Coach says, her gaze now locked onto yours. "Try me."
Your jaw clenches tighter.
Coach pivots to Juju. "You think I care what ESPN ranked you? You act like that again, you're out."
The silence that follows isn't just awkward â it's charged with unspoken threats and simmering frustration.
And then, just as abruptly, Coach claps her hands together.
"Same teams as yesterday," she announces. "Watkins. Y/N. You're together today."
You nearly groan out loud. Juju scoffs softly under her breath. You both line up. The whistle blows, sharp and decisive.
And then something unexpected happens.
It begins as pure muscle memory. You take the inbound pass and your eyes instinctively scan the court, pivoting naturally to where Juju usually cuts across the top of the key â and there she is. Quick. Fluid. Your eyes meet for a fleeting second, and without even thinking, you pass the ball.
Juju catches it in stride and elevates for a mid-range jumper.
Nothing but net.
No celebration. No smug smile. Just two silent nods exchanged across the court.
Next possession, Juju finds herself trapped in the corner, two defenders closing in. You see it unfold even before she calls for help â you slip out of the paint, creating an open passing lane. Juju whips the ball to you without looking. You take two quick dribbles, spin off your defender, and hand it right back.
Juju drives baseline, two defenders clinging to her hip, and pulls up for another shot.
Swish.
And then it clicks.
You move together as if you're wired the same way. You dictate the pace, and Juju responds with perfect timing. Juju pushes the tempo, and you fill the lane without hesitation. It's intuitive. Seamless. Like two pieces of the same powerful engine finally finding their rhythm.
Coach folds her arms on the sideline, her eyes narrowed in observation.
You're not just good together. You're terrifying.
Even with the lingering tension, the unspoken words hanging heavy in the air â neither of you smiling, neither speaking â it doesn't matter. Your bodies communicate in a language you haven't shared until now. Pure, instinctive chemistry. And the rest of the team feels it too. Plays that were once clunky and disjointed now flow smoothly, both of you orchestrating the pace with an effortless understanding.
You start anticipating Juju's footwork, trailing behind her and dishing the ball mid-step, trusting her to catch and finish. Juju begins trusting you to take the pressure off when she's double-teamed â something she rarely allows anyone to do.
For the first time in her life, Juju isn't the only one calling the shots.
And she doesn't hate it.
She wants to hate it â wants to ignore the way your timing elevates her game, makes her sharper. Wants to pretend the bounce passes that slice between defenders aren't the best she's seen since high school.
But facts are undeniable.
You make the game easier. You even make it fun.
But Juju isn't about to admit that. Not with yesterday's harsh words still lodged in her throat.
She glances at you after another assist â a fast break finish, clean and precise â and catches the faintest hint of a smirk playing on your lips.
Cocky. Effortless. Of course.
You don't say anything either.
You're not ready to voice it aloud, but this feels right. This is what basketball should be. Fast, ruthless, and beautiful. And for the first time in a long time, you're not the only one who can match your tempo.
You've spent weeks dreading Juju's presence, resenting her dominance. But out here, with the scoreboard ticking, sweat dripping, and no one else able to keep up?
You can't deny it. You need her.
And maybe, just maybe, Juju needs you too.
Coach's whistle blows again. "Hold it."
Everyone freezes mid-motion.
She doesn't speak for a few long seconds. She just looks at the two of you, her gaze intense. Then, a small, almost imperceptible smile touches her lips.
"That's what I'm talking about," she says, her voice low and steady.
She isn't grinning or clapping her hands like some overly enthusiastic little league coach. No â Coach looks satisfied. Like someone who's been patiently waiting for this exact moment to unfold.
"If you two keep playing like that," she says slowly, deliberately, "we're not just going to the tournament."
Another pause hangs in the air.
"We're making a deep run."
Your heart thuds in your chest.
Juju doesn't look over at you. But she doesn't have to. You both know what that means.
It isn't about becoming best friends. Or even about getting along.
It's about legacy.
About banners hanging in the rafters. About proving something â everything â to the world. And you're finally on the same page.
Even if neither of you is ready to say it out loud.
âł make sure to check out my navigation or masterlist if you enjoyed! any interaction is greatly appreciated !
âł thank you for reading all the way through, as always âĄ
Took a nap for an hour THE DRAFTED ALL 3 OF MY GIRLS AGGVGGGGGGG
oh how i miss you juju đđđ
i can't wait till we get her back
đ⨠A Voice from Gaza: Fighting for Hope â¤ď¸âđŠš
Hi, my name is Mosab , and Iâm from Gaza. Life here has been harder than I could ever imagine, but today Iâm sharing my story with hope in my heart, because your kindness has already given us so much strength.
This journey hasnât been easy. The war has taken 25 family members from usâ25 beautiful souls we loved deeply. Their laughter, their presence, their love⌠all of it is gone, leaving behind memories that are both precious and painful. Every day, I carry the weight of their loss, but I also carry their spirit, which gives me the strength to keep going.
Our Journey So Far
When I first reached out, I couldnât have imagined weâd make it this far. Your support has been a light in these difficult times, and we are so deeply grateful for every single contribution.
But the road ahead is still challenging. Every day, weâre reminded of how much weâve lost and how much we still need to rebuild.
Hereâs what life in Gaza looks like for my family right now:
đ Safety: The uncertainty of tomorrow weighs heavily on us.
đ˘ Loss: The absence of the 25 family members weâve lost is a pain we carry every moment.
đ Dreams on Hold: The future feels so far away when survival takes all our strength.
How You Can Help Us Cross the Finish Line Even the smallest act of kindness can make a difference:
$5 may seem small, but for us, itâs a little relief, a moment of comfort, and a reminder that kindness still exists. â¤ď¸
Canât donate? Reblog this post to help us reach someone who can. Every share matters more than you know.
Why Your Support Matters Your kindness isnât just about helping us meet our goalâitâs about reminding us that weâre not alone in this fight. Itâs about hope. Itâs about survival. And itâs about giving my family a chance to rebuild our lives, even in the face of unimaginable loss.
Thank you for helping us get this far. Your generosity and compassion have already brought us closer to a better tomorrow, and for that, Iâm endlessly grateful.
With all my love and gratitude,
Mosab and Family â¤ď¸
Good morning to all, bust specially to KKđЎ
recently discovered this ig page that's like the onion for women's sports news and i'm dying
Loved the moment on the carpet with her sisters/ future bridesmaids