After a second consecutive year of missing the NCAA Tournament and witnessing seven players enter the transfer portal, the Stanford women’s basketball program finds itself under scrutiny regarding its culture under head coach Kate Paye. Paye recently completed her second season after taking over from the legendary Tara VanDerveer.
A parent of a player who experienced both coaching regimes described the current atmosphere to The San Francisco Standard as “not a great environment,” adding, “It’s not the same program anymore.”
Under VanDerveer, Stanford had an impressive run, appearing in 36 consecutive NCAA Tournaments, the second-longest streak in the history of women’s basketball. During her 38-year tenure, the Cardinal reached the Final Four 14 times and claimed national championships in 1990, 1992, and 2021.
This past season marked a downturn, with Stanford failing to make the AP Top 25 for the first time in three decades, although they did feature in the CBS Sports power rankings. The team transitioned from the Pac-12 to the ACC in 2024, coinciding with VanDerveer’s retirement and the departure of star forward Cameron Brink to the WNBA. While challenges during rebuilding phases are common, insiders cited cultural issues within the program as a concern.
Two former players, who chose to remain anonymous, shared with The Standard that Paye held “distressing team meetings.” They reported that while it’s standard for coaches to threaten benching players to address performance issues, some athletes were allegedly told they were “too weak” for the program. Additionally, Paye allegedly hinted at more severe consequences, such as “revoking scholarships or withholding recommendations for graduate school programs.”
These student-athletes also mentioned that players could feel “iced out” of practices if they fell out of favor with the coaching staff. The Standard’s report further suggests a “culture of retribution” for those who voiced concerns about perceived injustices. Furthermore, the coach is reportedly considering a policy that would restrict student-athletes from taking larger course loads and summer classes, potentially to prevent early graduation. Last year, three Stanford players graduated ahead of schedule alongside the transfer portal exits.
Reportedly, director and chair of athletics John Donahoe observed multiple practices after parents filed reports about what they deemed described as an unwelcoming and toxic environment. Stanford did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CBS Sports regarding the The Standard’s article.
Paye, who has been at Stanford since 2007, would hardly be the only coach who has been tough with her players and has controversial methods. VanDerveer herself has a reputation for pushing the limits. South Carolina coach Dawn Staley played for USA Basketball under VanDerveer in the 90s and gave some insight in her book, “Uncommon Favor.” Staley described her as a perfectionist who would relentlessly criticize everything, single out players and remind everyone on the roster to not take their sports for granted.
“She would play mind games. She would mentally challenge you. Almost to the breaking point,” Staley wrote. “… As you can imagine, Tara was practically despised.”
The tough love is also not limited to Stanford coaches. Kentucky coach Kenny Brooks brought tears to star player Clara Strack’s eyes when he told her, “You’re the worst superstar I’ve ever coached,” — although she ended up using it for motivation and turned up the intensity. Meanwhile, a turning point for Texas this past season came after Vic Schaefer went viral for telling his Longhorns that they were the “softest team I’ve had in years.”
Regardless of whether or not Paye has gone too far, the fact that Stanford women’s basketball is dealing with negative headlines about culture is noteworthy for such a storied program. The Cardinal will have just five returners for the 2026-27 season.
Stanford is not alone in this high turnover, with the transfer portal and NIL playing bigger roles in college basketball. Pittsburgh, Tennessee, Iowa State and Penn State are other Power Four programs that have also lost at least seven players. Texas also had some shocking departures despite back-to-back Final Four runs.
The Cardinal have the added difficulty of high academic standards, which limits the pool of student athletes that could join the program. There is also the complexity of the NIL era. Earlier this month, The Stanford Daily published a story about how a national survey by Athletes.org paints Stanford athletics in an unfavorable light. Some notably low-ranking categories were the overall “College Experience” which received a 3.5 out of 5, and the NIL Support which received a 2.7.
Those who spoke to The Standard for their recent story said NIL could have been part of why players decided to transfer but perhaps not the main reason. The outlet did point out that multiple sources said Stanford paid “players in the rotation” up to six-figure deals starting in January.
“To be clear,” one parent told The Standard, “the girls did not want to leave Stanford. It will be spun that way, but it was not about NIL.”
