How do you course of profitable all of it? It’s a sense most of us won’t ever perceive, nor expertise: solely the choose few ever win championships, and whenever you’re enjoying for a program that’s synonymous with profitable, the usual is even increased. For Gamecock standout Tessa Johnson, the then-freshman had heard all about how tough it was to solidify a ‘chip from former gamers and even the teaching employees, however to take action after the group gained the 12 months prior. However after posting an undefeated season, holding their very own within the 2024 NCAA match, they defeated Iowa to win their third title below the helm of legendary head coach Daybreak Staley.
The epic showdown drew 18.9 million views, making it essentially the most watched basketball sport since 2019. The world noticed not solely how undeniably dominate the Gamecocks are, and have at all times been, however bought a glimpse at simply what to anticipate from the way forward for the sport: with a gifted roster that included a future first-round WNBA draft choose in Kamilla Cardoso, they have been additionally geared up with a core group of freshman and sophomores, together with Johnson, MiLaysia Fulwiley, Raven Johnson and Chloe Kitts, they might’ve simply faltered below the stress. As Staley advised us for the quilt of SLAM 250, moderately than having “balked” for minutes or enjoying time, they carried themselves with grace, have been guided by veteran management and confirmed up each sport with a can’t-lose mentality that, finally, grew to become a actuality.
“It bought more durable each degree within the competitors,” Johnson advised us in Might, only a month after the title sport. “We performed Texas A&M twice, most likely, and within the common season, in comparison with within the SEC match, that was a complete completely different group. So simply, the competitors, and the truth that everybody was both profitable or completed—I feel the extent of competitors grew quite a bit it was far more bodily. You needed to be in your A sport. The preparation is essential and I feel our coaches did a superb job of mentally making ready us in addition to bodily making ready us. And in addition, the leaders on my group, the older folks, they advised us what to sort of anticipate. MiLaysia [and I], they advised us simply to play our sport, neglect the large stage or no matter.”
As your entire world watch Staley’s squad energy their method by means of the NCAA match, the Nationwide Championship was the head of must-see TV. And when the lights have been the brightest, Johnson, who performed essentially the most minutes (25) for a freshman, shined just like the star that she is and led her squad with a career-high 19 factors off the bench. To say that she was clutch could be an understatement, Johnson was pure perfection at any time when the second known as upon her, which was very often. Within the second, she was on the market flattening silky-smooth midrange jumpers and ending on the rim with ease, and by the third, she was dishing dimes to teammates like Bree Corridor and hitting clutch threes that had everybody in Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on their toes.
Not solely was she essentially the most environment friendly on the ground, capturing 63 good from the sphere, however she was completely fearless.

Fearless is a phrase the Minnesota-native resonates with on a good deeper, non secular degree.
“Earlier than the video games, I pray as a result of I play for God on the market. Apart from the truth that I play for South Carolina, my household and my teammates, I actually play for God. I characterize Him on the court docket and so I pray to only ease my thoughts, give me peace, and I pray for the opposite group, [too]. [For] no accidents and stuff like that. That calms me down once I get on the court docket. I used to be additionally considering of the phrase fearless, as a result of, once I was youthful, I’d play fearless. [I’d think], Why am I afraid to make errors? Like, everybody’s gonna make errors on the market on the court docket.”
It’s a pregame apply that Johnson’s at all times had as a part of her routine: throughout heat ups, she sits within the fourth chair from the tip. The quantity 4 is a symbolic one for her: a four-star recruit, Johnson wore No. 4 all through her highschool profession as a star at St. Michael-Albertville. It additionally reminds her of her sister, Rae, who rocked it as her jersey quantity whereas hoopin’ at Iowa State, and within the Bible, the quantity additionally represents the artistic work of God, particularly in creating all of life in a four-day span.
“I simply prayed [for] what I felt in my coronary heart,” Johnson provides. “If I keep in mind appropriately, I used to be praying for steerage, for peace [and] for energy on the court docket.”

All season lengthy, Johnson says her mindset was to only belief the method, particularly on condition that she was new to the group and felt that she had quite a bit to be taught when it comes to comfortability on the hardwood. “I’m a newbie, I’m not as comfy on the court docket, I haven’t performed with them earlier than, so simply belief the method, belief my coaches, and belief myself on the market. As a result of, on the finish of the day, like I’ve labored, I don’t understand how lengthy, I don’t know what number of years, however I’ve labored for it, and simply to belief myself on the market, and believe on the market.”
Then there’s the belief that Staley had in her. Revered for being a “participant’s coach,” Staley has credited her teaching fashion as desirous to be a “dream service provider” for younger folks. What she noticed from Johnson, and others on the group, was simply that: an unwavering confidence and willingness to be taught and be guided. “Tessa [Johnson could’ve been like], I might play with the perfect of them. Let me get a few of Breezy’s time. Let me get a few of Raven’s time. [But] they didn’t,” she advised WSLAM. “Truly, the children simply allowed the older gamers to information them to the purpose the place they have been so assured getting into the basketball sport that they knew that they have been going to make an affect.”

It’s that kind of help that drew Johnson to South Carolina within the first place. Rising up, Johnson was at all times extremely aggressive—her mother, Danielle, who was us in our workplace when Johnson stopped by for a photoshoot—admits that she’s at all times had a craving to be the perfect.
“You at all times needed to be a dawg,” she chimes in and says to Tessa throughout our interview. “The very best at no matter they have been doing. If you labored laborious, you needed to be the primary one completed with one thing. You needed your journaling in school to be higher than the opposite youngsters. Not in a foul method, however simply that she needed to at all times do her greatest.”


Regardless of having a bubbly, upbeat persona, plus a humorousness that’s unmatched (go watch our newest video together with her, the 6-0 guard is so charismatic on digicam, she completely wants her personal tv present someday), Johnson’s skill to faucet into that degree of competitiveness at any time when she’s on the court docket is a part of what makes her a star on the hardwood. “I didn’t care what it was, I simply needed to do higher than them. After which, after doing it, one other aggressive piece of me is, I wish to do higher than what I simply did. So, like, at all times getting higher on daily basis is what motivates me.”
Johnson noticed herself having the ability elevate her sport to that degree in Columbia. After averaging 6.6 factors in her first 12 months, she’s now centered on not simply elevating her sport bodily this summer season, however is much more centered on her psychological well being. It’s at all times served as a key element of her breakout success, even relationship again to highschool when she missed her sophomore season due a damaged leg harm. Johnson returned as a junior and helped her group emerge as runner-up to the state title, and by her senior 12 months, she led her squad to its first state title since ‘09, dropping a double-double within the championship sport. “I really feel extra like, highly effective on the market as a result of I went by means of that and I’m again now,” she advised Kare11 Information in 2022.
Whilst an NCAA champion, Johnson appears like she will approve her psychological method much more. “Sure, I must work on all my bodily stuff and simply my abilities and fundamentals however I feel basketball is a really psychological sport,” she says. “Me with the ability to overcome all my errors and simply having a development mindset and with the ability to take heed to whoever’s making an attempt to assist me. I feel that’s what I must get higher at.”
How precisely does she plan on going about that? “That’s a superb query. Getting deeper into my religion,” she explains. “I feel that at all times helps and that’s what I do on daily basis. I attempt to construct a greater relationship with God. However, going about it, I feel I simply must at all times take moments out of my day and simply mirror on myself and consider what I must do higher and what I’ve overcome typically as a result of it’s important to assume constructive. I do know for me typically that’s laborious as a result of I’ve such excessive expectations for myself. And so once I don’t attain it, I’m like, I simply get a bit of unfavourable with myself. Like, the truth that I wish to be higher than my yesterday self. That helps me.”

As for a way life’s been since profitable the ‘chip, Johnson admits she’s nonetheless processing. It was a legendary second, one which’ll go down in not simply ladies’s basketball—however all of faculty hoops—historical past, however that doesn’t imply that the grind is over. Because the Gamecocks look to embark on the “Repeat Tour” for the 2024-25 season and run it again, they’ll must deliver that very same vitality after which some.
“[The recognition], it’s good, however then I’m considering of subsequent season as a result of that’s what we have now to do,” she says. “We will take all of the moments and benefit from the moments. However now, we’re on to summer season. And college is over, so we’re considering of subsequent season, simply figuring out and getting higher as a result of groups are going to scout us more durable and play us tighter. [They’ll] know extra of the little issues that we do. So, that’s sort of the mindset.”
Pictures by way of Getty Photographs. Portraits by Evan Bernstein.