When Sonia Raman walked onto the court at Tufts University as a freshman in 1992, she could never have imagined the groundbreaking path that lay ahead. More than three decades later, the 51-year-old has become the first person of Indian descent to lead a team in the Women’s National Basketball Association.

The Seattle Storm introduced Raman as their new head coach on November 5 at the BECU Storm Center for Basketball Performance, according to the team’s official announcement. It’s a homecoming of sorts—Raman’s wife, Milena Flores, is a former WNBA player from nearby Snohomish, Washington, according to ESPN.

“Seattle holds a special place in my heart, and my family and I are thrilled to return to this incredible city,” Raman said in the Storm’s October 28 announcement. “I’m deeply grateful to Storm ownership, Alisha Valavanis, Talisa Rhea and the entire organization for their trust and belief in me. I look forward to building on the proud legacy of this franchise and competing at the highest level for our fans.”

An Unconventional Journey

Born on February 11, 1974, in Framingham, Massachusetts, Raman is the daughter of Indian immigrants. Her mother is from Nagpur and her father is from Chennai, formerly known as Madras, according to NW Asian Weekly. Both parents emigrated to the United States after completing college.

“Certainly the work ethic that my parents have shaped me with, as immigrants to the U.S. Just seeing how hard they worked my whole life and still do has been my inspiration for how I approach everything,” Raman told FIBA Basketball in 2020, according to The IX Basketball.

Raman attended Framingham High School before enrolling at Tufts University in 1992, where she joined the basketball team as a walk-on. Her playing career took an unexpected turn during her junior year when she was hit by a car and broke her leg, forcing her to sit out the season, according to the Yakima Herald.

“I was never the most talented player on my team, so my value always had to be being prepared and being a great teammate,” Raman said in a 2021 story published by Tufts. “I was trying to help the team by encouraging my teammates and also starting to really study the game more.”

That injury proved pivotal. Unable to play, Raman began developing her coaching instincts from the sidelines. She served as co-captain her senior year before graduating in 1996 with a degree in international relations, according to The Tufts Daily.

The Legal Detour

Rather than immediately pursuing coaching, Raman chose a different path. She earned her Juris Doctor from Boston College Law School in 2001, according to NW Asian Weekly, and began working for the U.S. Department of Labor and later Fidelity Investments.

“I actually really loved my day job at Fidelity, but I think [my] passion was with coaching,” Raman, 51, told CNBC Make It. “Basketball just kept pulling me back in.”

While building her legal career, Raman couldn’t stay away from the court. She returned to Tufts as an assistant coach for two years after graduation, then spent six years as a part-time assistant at Wellesley College from 2002 to 2008 while maintaining her day job, according to the Yakima Herald.

“It was a calculated risk,” Raman told CNBC about her decision to leave corporate law behind in 2008 to coach full-time.

Building a Powerhouse at MIT

In 2008, Raman accepted the head coaching position at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, taking over a struggling Division III program. Her first season was brutal—just 4 wins and 19 losses, according to The Tufts Daily.

“I thought I had landed my dream job with MIT,” Raman said, according to the Yakima Herald. “I was very much excited to be at MIT for the long haul.”

Raman describes herself as a “hoops junkie” who takes a holistic approach to coachin. “Use everything you have available to you. It’s 2025.”

Over 12 years, Raman transformed the Engineers into a perennial contender. She became the winningest coach in program history with a 152-155 overall record, including an impressive 91-45 mark over her final five seasons, according to the Yakima Herald. Her teams won the program’s first two NEWMAC conference championships in 2018 and 2019, and she earned New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference Coach of the Year honors twice, according to Diya TV and The Indian Panorama.

Breaking NBA Barriers

In September 2020, the Memphis Grizzlies announced they had hired Raman as an assistant coach, making her the first Indian American woman and the 14th woman to be named an NBA coach, according to Wikipedia. The opportunity came through Rich Cho, the Grizzlies’ vice president of basketball strategy and himself the first Asian American general manager in NBA history, according to The Tufts Daily.

“It just became apparent that it was just kind of an opportunity of a lifetime,” Raman said, according to The Tufts Daily.

Grizzlies head coach Taylor Jenkins was enthusiastic about the hire. “She has a high basketball IQ and a tremendous ability to teach the game, as well as a strong passion for the game,” Jenkins said in a statement, according to She The People. “She is going to be a great addition to our current coaching staff.”

Raman spent four years with the Grizzlies, focusing on scouting, player development and analytics, according to the Storm’s announcement. In 2025, she joined the New York Liberty’s coaching staff as an assistant under Sandy Brondello.

The Storm Job

Storm General Manager Talisa Rhea conducted an extensive search after deciding not to renew Noelle Quinn’s contract. Quinn had gone 97-89 over five seasons but suffered back-to-back first-round playoff exits, according to ESPN.

“Our interview process was extensive,” Rhea said at Raman’s introduction, according to NW Asian Weekly. “We talked to a diverse candidate pool with a wide range of experiences, but it was clear from the first conversation we had with Sonia that there was real alignment and the potential for a wonderful partnership. Sonia is a trailblazer, and her vision for us and where we could go was very exciting.”

Rhea emphasized Raman’s diverse skill set. “On the court, Sonia’s a leader in analytics and player development, two critical areas as our game continues to grow and evolve,” Rhea said, according to ESPN. “She’s innovative, forward-thinking and committed to the development of players both individually and collectively as a group.”

Coaching Philosophy and Challenges Ahead

Raman describes herself as a “hoops junkie” who takes a holistic approach to coaching, according to FOX 13 Seattle. “Use everything you have available to you. It’s 2025,” Raman said, according to FOX 13. “We have all the technology in the world. We have the data. We have the film. We have expert coaches.”

Having started her time in Memphis with a focus on defense before shifting to offense, Raman wants the Storm’s identity to start with multiple efforts on defense and carry over to up-tempo offense with an emphasis on floor spacing and half-court execution, according to ESPN.

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“I think it starts with we’re going to compete every night,” Raman told ESPN. “We’re going to have this growth mindset of getting better every day.”

The challenge is significant. All five Seattle starters from last season—four of whom were All-Stars—are set to be unrestricted free agents, including Nneka Ogwumike, Skylar Diggins, Brittney Sykes, and Gabby Williams, according to ESPN. However, Raman will have the opportunity to develop center Dominique Malonga, the No. 2 pick of the 2025 draft who earned WNBA All-Rookie honors as the league’s youngest player at age 19, according to ESPN.

“She was a problem coaching against her, I will say that,” Raman said of Malonga, according to ESPN. “Really, really excited to coach her and get to know her, both on and off the court and really start to build where she can go next.”

Historic Representation

Raman’s hiring makes her the first Asian American of Indian descent to lead a WNBA team and only the league’s second current head coach who is a woman of color, joining Golden State Valkyries’ Natalie Nakase, according to the Yakima Herald. Nakase, who became the first Asian American head coach in WNBA history in October 2024, also served as an NBA assistant before joining the WNBA coaching ranks, according to ESPN.

“It’s a tremendous honor and privilege to be sitting here and to be in that role,” Raman said at her introduction, according to NW Asian Weekly. “It’s a huge responsibility as well. I’ve said this before—I am the first, but I don’t want to be the last.”

“It’s really important to have representation and for younger people to be able to see that this is a viable option,” Raman told the New York Post, according to the Yakima Herald. “And something that they can work toward to be a coach at this level. I take that responsibility really seriously.”

Raman credited her extended family in India for their enthusiastic support. “My family is my Indian heritage,” she told She The People in 2020. She noted that her extended family, which includes “tons of uncles and aunties,” are huge basketball fans who are excited to watch the Storm games.

“I didn’t see anybody that looked like me when I was growing up playing basketball,” Raman told the Boston Herald in 2020. “If young girls and boys can see Indians in the NBA, I think that’s a cool thing.”

Pinnacle of Women’s Basketball

Raman plans to live in the Seattle area full-time, not just during the season, according to FOX 13 Seattle. She’s currently searching for a house and building her coaching staff, though she has not provided a timetable for those decisions.

“If I’m going to preach a growth mindset, if I’m going to preach getting better every day and embracing failure, then I need to live that,” Raman told CNBC Make It.

For Raman, whose journey has taken her from a walk-on college player to a lawyer to a Division III coach to the NBA and now to the pinnacle of women’s professional basketball, the message is clear: barriers are meant to be broken.

“I’m just going to be me,” Raman said at her introduction, according to FOX 13 Seattle. “I realize that it’s a whole different level. But, I think just relying on who I am as a person, being genuine, being authentic, and as they say, keeping the main thing the main thing is most important.”

This story, conceptualized and edited by American Kahani’s News Desk, was aggregated by AI from several news reports.