When Flau’jae Johnson officially joined the Seattle Storm, the franchise added more than a talented rookie. It added one of the most unique dual-career athletes in modern sports.
Selected No. 8 overall in the 2026 WNBA Draft, Johnson was initially picked by the Golden State Valkyries before being traded on draft night to Seattle. The move signaled the Storm’s commitment to building a dynamic young core around high-upside talent. She enters the league after a standout career at LSU, where she helped lead the Tigers to a national championship in 2023 and developed into one of the SEC’s most complete guards.
Johnson brings scoring versatility, perimeter shooting, and defensive energy. At 5-foot-10, she projects as a guard who can contribute on both ends of the floor, and Seattle views her as a key piece in its long-term rebuild. Early impressions from training camp and preseason suggest she has already begun to stand out not only for her skill but also for her confidence and leadership presence.
What makes Johnson especially distinctive is that basketball is only part of her identity. She is also an established music artist signed to Roc Nation, the label founded by Jay-Z. Her music career began long before the WNBA, shaped in part by her late father, rapper Camoflauge, and developed through early exposure on national platforms such as The Rap Game and America’s Got Talent.

