For much of the 2024-25 campaign, the South Carolina women’s basketball team has been home to one of the most exclusive clubs in college sports: the ‘Seat Belt Gang.’
The club’s two original members – Raven Johnson and Bree Hall – have been putting clamps on opposing offenses for much of the year, hence the nickname. Johnson’s defensive exploits this season have helped her land a spot on the SEC’s All-Defensive Team for the first time. While Hall has not received much national attention for her defense, she has quietly averaged just 1.2 personal fouls committed per game and drew some major praise from Dawn Staley when the Gamecock coach said Hall has a place on “my all-time all-defensive.”
But after the Gamecocks’ 63-54 win over Indiana, Johnson and Hall decided it was time to add a third teammate to their ranks: Te-Hina Paopao, a player who has been better known for her three-point shooting prowess throughout her college career.
“Te-Hina wants to be better, especially on defense. She brings a lot on offense, but the stuff that she did today, the blocks, they were phenomenal,” Johnson said. “She’s definitely a part of the ‘Seat Belt Gang.’”
“She was getting up there, but she really earned her spot today,” added Hall.
Heading into Sunday’s game, Paopao had totaled 35 blocks and 164 steals across 148 collegiate appearances. That’s just over 1.1 steals per game and around 0.23 blocks per game – or an average of one block every four contests.
Paopao finished South Carolina’s win with four blocked shots, in addition to two steals. And she did that while also stifling one of the Hoosiers’ top offensive weapons in Shay Ciezki.
Ciezki came into the contest as Indiana’s second-leading scorer, averaging 11.8 points per game. She ended up with 12 points on 5-10 shooting.