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They Better Call Me Sugar

My Journey from the Hood to the Hardwood

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In unflinchingly honest prose, Sugar Rodgers shares her inspiring story of overcoming tremendous odds to become an all-star in the WNBA.

Growing up in dire poverty in Suffolk, Virginia, Sugar (born Ta'Shauna) Rodgers never imagined that she would become an all-star player in the WNBA (Women's National Basketball Association). Both of her siblings were in and out of prison throughout much of her childhood and shootings in her neighborhood were commonplace. For Sugar this was just a fact of life.

While academics wasn't a high priority for Sugar and many of her friends, athletics always played a prominent role. She mastered her three-point shot on a net her brother put up just outside their home, eventually becoming so good that she could hustle local drug dealers out of money in one-on-one contests.

With the love and support of her family and friends, Sugar's performance on her high school basketball team led to her recruitment by the Georgetown Hoyas, and her eventual draft into the WNBA in 2013 by the Minnesota Lynx (who won the WNBA Finals in Sugar's first year). The first of her family to attend college, Sugar speaks of her struggles both academically and as an athlete with raw honesty.

Sugar's road to a successful career as a professional basketball player is fraught with sadness and death—including her mother's death when she's fourteen, which leaves Sugar essentially homeless. Throughout it all, Sugar clings to basketball as a way to keep herself focused and sane.

And now Sugar shares her story as a message of hope and inspiration for young girls and boys everywhere, but especially those growing up in economically challenging conditions. Never sugarcoating her life experiences, she delivers a powerful message of discipline, perseverance, and always believing in oneself.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 19, 2021
      In 31 intimate, accessibly voiced if transition-lacking chapters, Las Vegas Aces guard Ta’Shauna “Sugar” Rodgers recounts her life, from her youth “surrounded by drugs and violence” in Suffolk, Va., to her current career with the Women’s National Basketball Association. Born in 1989 to Barbara Mae “Bob Mae” Rodgers, the beloved “best candy lady on the block,” Sugar grew up a tomboy in a single-parent household with her older siblings and other family members, discovering a gift for sports despite her mother’s wish that she concentrate on her studies. Bob Mae “worked two jobs and lived on food stamps to make ends meet,” but Sugar reminisces on the good times her family had. Bob Mae also provides encouragement through Sugar’s early golf career, as Sugar meets Tiger Woods, features in his foundation’s Coca-Cola commercial, and later represents his team in a California invitational. With her sister in jail and her mother beginning to succumb to lupus, Sugar’s home life degrades, but she perseveres to attend college and reach the WNBA. Clearly illustrating her mother’s strong influence and her supportive community, Rodgers pulls no punches in this raw, emotional rags-to-riches memoir. Ages 11–up.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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