Top High School Prospect Jordan Hayes Commits to Dawn Staley’s Gamecocks
Columbia, S.C. – The South Carolina Gamecocks women’s basketball program has landed another star recruit. Five-star guard Jordan Hayes, a standout from Atlanta, Georgia, announced on Wednesday that she has committed to play for Coach Dawn Staley and the Gamecocks.
Hayes, a 6-foot-1 combo guard, is ranked among the top ten players nationally in the Class of 2026. Known for her explosive first step, sharpshooting ability, and relentless defense, Hayes has been on the radar of elite programs since her sophomore year of high school.
“I wanted to go somewhere that felt like family, but also where I would be challenged every single day,” Hayes said during her announcement. “Coach Staley has built something special at South Carolina, and I want to be a part of it.”
Coach Staley expressed her excitement over the commitment. “Jordan is the type of player who can change a game on both ends of the court,” Staley said. “Her versatility, leadership, and work ethic will fit perfectly with the culture we’ve built here. Gamecock Nation is going to love her.”
The Gamecocks, fresh off another dominant season in the SEC, continue to strengthen their roster with elite talent. Hayes will join a group of returning stars and incoming recruits that solidify South Carolina as a perennial national title contender.
Hayes is expected to bring immediate impact when she arrives on campus, with her ability to play multiple positions and contribute in big moments. Recruiting analysts have already labeled her as a “program-changer.”
South Carolina fans won’t have to wait long to see Hayes in action, as she will suit up for her final high school season this winter before officially joining the Gamecocks in the fall of 2026.
“Doubts grow: Can he Fix it Or is Mike Shula the wrong man to fix South Carolina’s broken offense?”
South Carolina offensive coordinator Mike Shula stepped to the podium Wednesday with more questions than answers. After the Gamecocks’ embarrassing 31-7 loss to Vanderbilt, fans wanted solutions. What they got instead was Shula’s trademark vagueness.
“I think offensively, we’ve done some good things,” Shula said. “And we haven’t done some good things.”
That understatement does little to explain why South Carolina’s offense has been one of the worst in the SEC through three weeks. The numbers are grim: just five touchdowns all season, a league-worst rushing attack, and an average of 303 total yards per game — dead last in the conference. Even with arguably the most athletic quarterback in program history in LaNorris Sellers, the offense has looked pedestrian.
It’s not just the lack of production that frustrates fans, but the pattern. Three of USC’s five touchdowns this year have come on scripted drives — the opening series against Virginia Tech and Vanderbilt, and the first possession of the second half versus SC State. Once the plays move beyond the script, the offense stalls.
So why can’t the Gamecocks adjust?
“Well, I mean, those are all things that, again, you look at during the course of the game,” Shula explained. “You look at going into a game. You look at after a game. Yeah, you want every drive to go 80 yards for a touchdown. You want every play to go score a touchdown. But, you know, the teams we’re playing are pretty good.”
Head coach Shane Beamer was more direct on Tuesday when asked about urgency.
“I mean, we only get 12 of these guaranteed,” Beamer said. “So there’s not a lot of patience that you have when things aren’t going well, to just say, ‘Well, hopefully by November we kick it into gear.’”
That urgency suggests South Carolina could look different offensively this Saturday against Missouri. Sellers, who left the Vanderbilt game with a concussion, is trending toward playing, which would give the Gamecocks a near full-strength unit.
But what exactly will change? Shula is unlikely to overhaul the playbook in a week. Instead, tweaks could come in the form of a simplified scheme, more pre-snap motion, or unleashing Sellers’ legs in designed runs.
At this point, “everything is on the table” as the Gamecocks prepare for a pivotal road test. Whether it looks different won’t be clear until the first few drives in Columbia, Missouri.