Could an HBCU coach be considered the next head coach at an SEC school?

Dawn Thornton has quietly built a resume that is getting louder by the season, and it now has her squarely in the conversation as an SEC school looks for a new women’s basketball coach.

Alabama is in the process of trying to replace Kristy Curry after she took the South Florida job.

In an article by Gadsden Times reporter Maxwell Donaldson, Thornton was one of nine names suggested to be the next Crimson Tide coach.

The Alabama A&M head coach has turned the Bulldogs into a SWAC power in just two years, making her an intriguing option as the Crimson Tide evaluates candidates with proven program-building chops.

In only her second season in Huntsville, Thornton guided Alabama A&M to a regular-season conference championship and the No. 1 seed in the SWAC Tournament, a benchmark that underscored how quickly she has elevated the program.

The Bulldogs’ 42-20 mark over those two seasons reflects both consistency and growth, with Alabama A&M stacking wins while positioning itself as a yearly threat in league play.

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Photo: Alabama A&M University

Thornton’s tenure has included a program-best 18-game winning streak and a push toward the school’s first NCAA Tournament bid, achievements that have drawn attention well beyond the conference. Her success also delivered one of the best two-year stretches in the program’s Division I era, reinforcing her reputation as a coach who can maximize talent and momentum.

Track record across the SWAC

Before arriving at Alabama A&M, Thornton built her reputation across multiple HBCU stops, with head-coaching experience at Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Prairie View A&M and Shorter. That path has given her deep familiarity with the southern footprint and recruiting base, as well as a track record of navigating the challenges that come with rebuilding and sustaining smaller programs.

Her cumulative work in the league has pushed her past the 100-win mark in conference play and SWAC Coach of the Year, a sign of both staying power and adaptability across different rosters and institutional settings.

That kind of longevity and success within one region is likely to appeal to any Power 4 athletic director looking for a coach who understands the Southeast’s recruiting landscape and talent pipeline.

Why Alabama would look her way

Curry’s departure for South Florida after 13 seasons and 244 wins at Alabama leaves a sizable void, but it also opens the door for a fresh voice with a track record of overachieving.

As Alabama surveys candidates, Thornton’s ability to win big without Power 4 resources serves as a compelling proof of concept for what she might do with the SEC’s platform and budget.

 

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Her résumé checks several boxes that typically matter in a search of this magnitude: head-coaching experience, recent success, ties to the region and evidence of player development in systems that have produced both wins and postseason opportunities.

For a program that has been a regular in the NCAA Tournament in recent years, the prospect of pairing that existing foundation with a hungry, ascending coach like Thornton is the kind of scenario that keeps a candidate firmly on the short list

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