The next competition for the U.S. womenโs national program is the FIBA Under-17 World Cup, which tipped off on Saturday in Debrecen, Hungary. The gold medal game will be on July 17.
The U.S. is in Group D with Germany, Mali and New Zealand. The 16-team field also boasts: host Hungary, Mexico, Belgium and Japan in Group A; Australia, France, Argentina and Slovenia in Group B; and Egypt, Canada, Spain and Korea in Group C.ย
Sue Phillips is the coach of the U.S. team, which has won four of the five Under-17 World Cups since the eventโs inception in 2010, including the most recent edition in Minsk, Belarus, in 2018. She retains many of the players she guided to the gold medal at last yearโs FIBA Americas Under-16 Championship in Leon, Mexico. Phillips is entering her 28thย season as coach of Californiaโs Archbishop Mitty High School and was also the Under-17 World Cup coach in 2014.
โOn any given day, any one of our 12 players will play a significant role for our team,โ Phillips said. โWe have talent and versatility. Our strength is our ability to get different [contributions] from the five who are out there.”
Judea โJuJuโ Watkins was the MVP of the Under-16 team, averaging 20 points and five steals. She scored 28 points in the gold medal win over Canada. The 6โ1 forward will be a senior at Sierra Canyon High School this season.
โWatkins is back from last season’s Under-16 team without missing a step,” Phillips said. “Her playmaking and distributing has improved both on and off the ball, and she has a terrific nose for the ball.”
Jada Williams, a 5โ8 guard from San Diego, has committed to UCLA after her 2023 graduation. She was named to the All-Star Five at the event in Leon.
โWilliams was the MVP of the 3X3 team,โ Phillips added. โShe is talented on all three levels of the game [offense, defense and transition].โ

Also on the team are Sunaja Agara (a Stanford commit from Minnesota), Madison Booker (from Mississippi), Jaloni Cambridge (a 5โ6 guard from Nashville), Morgan Cheli (who Phillips coaches at Archbishop Mitty), Breya Cunningham (a 6โ4 center from San Diego headed to the University of Arizona), Jadyn Donovan (from Maryland), Hannah Hildago (from New Jersey), Mackenly Randolph (also from Sierra Canyon), Kennedy Umeh (a 6โ4 junior from Maryland) and Mikaylah Williams (an LSU recruit from Bossier City, La.).

A committee selected the 12-player roster out of 40 players invited to a camp. The selection committee is separate from the one that chooses the players for the senior nationalย team. The players had a week of trials, then one week of camp. Three days of preparation in Spain followed with the Spanish, French and Australian national teams.
French 6โ6 center Dominique Malonga was the MVP of the Under-16 European Challenger, scoring nearly 20 points and grabbing 10 rebounds per game. Annika Soltau of Germany, who is 6โ4, nearly mirrored Malongaโs numbers in the event with 17.4 and 11.4. Hungarian forward Petra Toman averaged more than 17 points per game as well. Jana Elafly of Egypt led the Under-16 African Championships with more than 18 points per game. Australiaโs 6โ4 Isla Juffermans was the leading scorer and rebounder of the Under-16 Asian Championships. She averaged 19.7 and 12.2, with a 37/15 performance in a semifinal win over Korea. Rokiatou Berthe was the MVP of the African Under-16 event for champion Mali.
The U.S. opened with Mali on Saturday, getting a comfortable 78-49 win behind 12 points and six rebounds from Randolph. Booker chipped in four points and a game-high nine rebounds. The Americans will play New Zealand on Sunday and Germany on Tuesday.
“All three are really dangerous and confident opponents,โ Phillips said. โIt will be great for our development.โ
The U.S. defeated France in the final of the 2018 Under-17 World Cup, 92-40. Jordan Horston, now with the University of Tennessee, was named MVP. South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston, Stanford’s Haley Jones, Shyla Heal (Australia) and Iliana Rupert (France) joined Horston on the All-Tournament team.
