Four visa denials, one dream: The rise of Madina Okot

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In Mumias, Western Kenya, where red soil clings to everything it touches and sports facilities are often improvised rather than built, dreams rarely arrive with structure.

But for Madina Okot, structure was never part of the beginning.

Okot’s journey didn’t begin with basketball. She was a volleyball player at Bishop Sulumeti High School – tall and athletic, but far from a finished product

Her life changed during the Kenya Secondary Schools Association (KSSSA) Games in Kisumu, when Kaya Tiwi High School principal Robert Avan spotted her raw potential and offered her a full scholarship—this time, to play basketball.

A scholarship offer that changed everything

It was an unfamiliar sport. An uncertain path. But also, an opportunity. A decision not easy at all, but she accepted.

Avan had seen something else.

“We saw the player and went for her before any other team took note of her, amazing height,” Avan later said.

Starting from scratch

 At Kaya Tiwi, Okot was not a star, she was a beginner.

Under coach Philip Onyango, she had to learn everything from the ground up: footwork, positioning, movement. Progress was slow, mistakes were constant, but her determination never wavered.

“She had the body, but the game had to be built step by step,” he said

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Breakthrough at 17

Her rise came quickly. At just 17, she earned her first call-up to the national team. Not as a finished product, but as a work in progress already producing results.

By then, she was also shining at Zetech University Sparks, one of Kenya’s strongest women’s basketball clubs, under coach Maurice Obilo.

In 2022, her career accelerated. With COVID-19 restrictions easing, she helped Kenya’s U23 3×3 team win the FIBA Nations League Africa (South) in Nairobi, earning a ticket to the World Championships in Romania. Two weeks later, she featured for the senior team at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham.

She shared the court with experienced names, but she held her own. Kenya beat Sri Lanka 21–8 in the group stage before exiting in the quarter-finals against England.

She wasn’t just participating—she was learning, adapting, and growing.

“I had great learning experiences in Birmingham that helped me view the game differently, and one thing I took home is that you either adjust or you get exposed,” she reflected later.

Later that year, Okot featured for KPA at the FIBA Africa Women’s Champions Cup in Maputo, where she emerged as the tournament’s top rebounder, averaging 12.3 rebounds per game.

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It was a quiet but powerful statement—the teenager belonged.

The setback: Four visa denials

Just as her star was rising, her path to the United States hit a wall.

Four visa applications. Four rejections.

Each denial delayed her dream of playing college basketball, the most direct route to the WNBA.

“It was painful, but I never believed it was the end,” she said.

In that period, faith became central.

“I learned that timing is not mine. It’s God’s timing,” she would later say.

Still, she kept working, anchored by faith and patience.

The final breakthrough

Madina Okot

On her fifth attempt, the door finally opened.

Okot joined Mississippi State University, where her impact was immediate, especially in rebounding and interior dominance. But her defining chapter came after transferring to University of South Carolina.

Under legendary coach Dawn Staley, she refined her game—sharpening her defense, decision-making, and overall discipline.

When asked why she brought Madina into her system, Coach Staley described her as a dominant force and a “powerhouse” who is still only “scratching the surface” of her potential as a player and she wanted to be the one to refine the rough diamond that she was.

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“Coach Staley doesn’t allow shortcuts,” Madina once said. “You either grow or you don’t play.”

And she grew.

South Carolina would go on to reach the NCAA Finals, with Okot becoming the first Kenyan to play at that stage.

The WNBA dream realizedNew Atlanta Dream draftee Madina Okot (Right) poses for a photo with Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) commissioner Cathy Engelbert The Shed at Hudson Yards in New York City on April 13, 2026. Photo Courtesy

Her selection into the WNBA, landing a spot with the Atlanta Dream, was not just a personal victory. It was the culmination of years of struggle, growth, and belief.

From Mumias to the global stage.
From a volleyball player to a professional basketball star.
From four visa denials to an American dream fulfilled.

Okot’s story is more than a career milestone—it’s a powerful reminder that timing may delay a dream, but persistence can still deliver it.

“I always knew I would play at a high level,” she said. “I just didn’t know when.”

The door has finally opened, and now, the world knows.

 

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