Gabby Williams
Gabrielle Lisa Williams is an American-French professional basketball player for the Seattle Storm of the Women's National Basketball Association and for Fenerbahçe of the Turkish Super League and EuroLeague Women. She was drafted 4th overall by the Chicago Sky in the 2018 WNBA draft. In 2022 she was a EuroLeague champion with Sopron and was named the Final Four MVP. Williams played forward in college for the UConn Huskies, and won back to back national championships in 2015 and 2016.
She has played for the French national team in the Tokyo 2020 and the Paris 2024 Olympic games.
Personal life
Williams was raised in Sparks, Nevada by her father Matthew, who is American, and mother Thérèse, who is French.Williams is fluent in the French language, having grown up speaking it with her grandmother, and maintains both American and French citizenship. She started being taught French at age six by her grandmother, Angela Bishop from Paris, who lived just down the street from her.
High school
Basketball
Williams attended and played basketball at Edward C. Reed High School in Sparks, Nevada. As a sophomore she averaged 18 points, 10 rebounds, and seven steals per game in leading Reed to the Class 4A state title. Williams had 15 points, 14 rebounds, and six assists in a semifinal win over Foothill, then had 24 points, four rebounds, and four assists in the championship game win over Reno and was named the Las Vegas Review-Journal Class 4A state Player of the Year. During her junior year, Williams was averaging 30 points, 11 rebounds, six assists, and seven blocked shots per game when she suffered a completely torn anterior cruciate ligament and partially-torn meniscus in her right knee on Jan. 19 just 30-seconds into a game against rival Reno High. She had season-ending surgery Feb. 11 and was cleared to return to full basketball activity Oct. 10.Track and field
Williams was a very accomplished multi-event track and field athlete. She was named the Gatorade Nevada Girls Track & Field Athlete of the Year, honoring the best track and field athlete in high school while still a freshman. She competed in the state meet, finishing second in the 100 meter hurdles and third in the 300 meter hurdles as well as helping the 4 x 400 meter relay team finish second. She cleared 5'8" in the high jump, which ranked number 36 among all high school players in the nation. As a sophomore, she repeated as the Gatorade Nevada Girls Track & Field Athlete of the Year. At the state championships, she won the 100 meter hurdles as well as the 300 meter hurdles and cleared 5'11" to win the high jump. At a regional meet she cleared 6 feet 1.5 inches, which ranked as the top performance among high school competitors at the time and was second best among all of Division I. At the Olympic trials in 2012, she cleared 6 feet inches to finish in fifth place among all competitors, while still too young to be eligible for the US world Junior team, although she qualified as an alternate for the 2012 London Olympics.College
University of Connecticut
Williams helped UConn reach a 148–3 record over her four-year career, which included four Final Four appearances and back to back National Championships. She had one of only five Huskies triple-doubles in school history. She is one of only nine Huskies with at least 1,000 points and 1,000 rebounds. Williams finished her career 22nd on UConn's all-time scoring list at 1,582 career points, seventh with 1,007 career rebounds, 13th in assists and fifth in steals. Williams was named the 2017 American Athletic Conference and WBCA NCAA Division I Defensive Player of the Year and 2018 Lowe's Senior Class Award.Awards and honors
- 2017–United States Basketball Writers Association All-America Team
- 2017–WBCA Defensive Player of the Year
- 2017–AP All-American second team
- 2017–AAC Defensive Player of the Year
- 2017–NCAA Tournament - All Tournament Team
Professional career
WNBA
Williams was drafted 4th overall in the 2018 WNBA draft by the Chicago Sky.On May 9, 2021, it was announced that Williams was traded to the Los Angeles Sparks. On February 3, 2022, Williams was acquired by the Seattle Storm in a trade that sent Katie Lou Samuelson, and the 9th overall pick in 2022 WNBA draft to the Sparks. Williams was a key piece for the 2022 Storm squad, starting in all 36 games during the regular season. However, after suffering a concussion while playing with LDLC ASVEL in France, she would miss a significant portion of the beginning of the 2023 season. After recovering, she signed a new, rest-of-season contract with the Storm in an announcement made on June 26, 2023. On August 8th, 2023, in a match against the Connecticut Sun, Williams would suffer a left foot injury that would end her season.
European career
In 2018, Williams signed with Dike Basket Napoli of the Italian First Division. In January 2019, after week 14, her team withdrew from the championships. Williams signed to Spar CityLift Girona in late February 2019 to replace Shay Murphy, who left the team for family reasons and returned to the United States. With Girona, she won the 2018–19 Spanish First Division.Sopron Basket
On 15 May 2020, Williams signed to Sopron Basket with former UConn teammate Megan Walker. On April 10, 2022, Williams won the 2021–22 EuroLeague Women championship with Sopron Basket, while being named Final Four MVP after the final.ASVEL Féminin
On 15 June 2022, Williams signed to LDLC ASVEL. In 2023, she won the Eurocup as well as the French championship with ASVEL. Her second season at ASVEL was shadowed by an injury and the death of her father.Fenerbahçe
Williams inked a deal with Fenerbahçe S.K. in July 2024.Olympics
Tokyo 2020 (held in 2021)
Although Williams was born and raised in the United States, her mother is French and she has extended family living in France, so she qualified for inclusion on the French national team. Her Olympic experience was not her first experience with the French team, as she played for Les Bleues in the 2021 Eurobasket competition, helping the team to win silver. Williams averaged 8.2 points per game in that competition.The decision to play for the Olympic team was not without cost. Many of the Olympic players, not just for the USA, but for several other teams, play in the WNBA, whose regular-season typically runs through the summer months. To accommodate the Olympics, the WNBA typically takes a month-long break in the season during Olympic years; however, Williams's commitments to the French national team interfered with her ability to show up at training camp for the Chicago Sky. She told ESPN's Michael Voepel that she thought she had reached an understanding with the team regarding her commitments, but the team disagreed, suspended her from the team and traded her to the Los Angeles Sparks. She was a member of the Sparks after the Olympics were over, but because she was suspended, she was ineligible to play during the season, so her decision to play for the French national team cost her an entire WNBA season.
In the opening game of the preliminary rounds, France faced Japan. France was ranked fifth in the world at the time while Japan was 10th, but Japan was playing in their home country, and they upset France 74–70. Williams played 31 minutes, more than any other player on her team. France was allocated to group B, which also included the USA and Nigeria. While France could advance even with a loss to the USA, they would not advance to the knockout stage if they lost to Nigeria, so they found themselves in a must win situation in just their second game. France "righted the ship.. against Nigeria", winning 87–62. Williams had 13 points and nine rebounds, just missing a double double. She also led the team in steals.
In the game against the United States, which had not lost an Olympic game since 1992, the Americans again prevailed, but France kept the game close, finally losing 93–82. Voepel noted that Williams was called a "Swiss Army knife" due to her versatility. She was the only member of the French team to record results in five statistical categories: points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocks. In the knockout round, France faced Spain and just managed to come away with a win, 67-64. Williams was one of two French players with double-digit scoring, recording 11 points in 29 minutes. The semi-final match was against Japan, who had never won an Olympic medal, but was now playing for a chance to make it to the gold-medal game on their home territory. Japan won 87–71. Williams played a team-high 26 minutes and recorded eight rebounds, more than any other player on either team.
In the bronze medal game, France faced Serbia, who had beaten France for the Eurobasket championship less than two months earlier. Serbia started out strong, and led 23–19 at the end of the first quarter. France battled back, taking the lead with less than a minute left in the half. They never relinquished the lead and ended up winning by 15 points, 91–76. While Williams had played well up to this point, she saved her best for last, hitting four of her five three-point attempts, tying for the team lead in assists and the only player on her team to record a block and a steal in the game. She was the leading scorer for her team with 17 points.
Paris 2024
Williams was again named to the French national team for the 2024 Olympics, winning a silver medal in the tournament. Heading into the final game against the USA, Williams averaged 14.8 points, 4.2 rebounds, 5.4 assists, and 2.8 steals in France's five Olympic games while shooting 49.2% from the field. She was the French team's leader in points, assists and steals for the Olympic tournament.- ALL-STAR FIVE of Paris Olympics 2024 Women's Basketball
- Best Defensive Player of Paris Olympics 2024 Women's Basketball