Brooke Wyckoff

Brooke Wyckoff (born March 30, 1980) is an American former professional basketball player and current head coach of the Florida State Seminoles women's basketball team.

A 6'1" forward from Florida State, Wyckoff played in the WNBA from 2001 to 2009, competing for the Orlando Miracle, the Connecticut Sun, and the Chicago Sky.

Brooke played 132 games for the Sun, where she is remembered for the clutch three-pointer she hit in the final seconds of Game 2 of the 2005 WNBA Finals against the Sacramento Monarchs at Mohegan Sun Arena. That shot sent the game to overtime.

She played for CB Estudiantes in Spain during the 2008–09 WNBA off-season.

She tore her ACL and decided to retire following the 2009 season. She spent two years as an assistant girls’ basketball coach at Lakota East High in Cincinnati before joining the Florida State women's basketball staff as an assistant coach in June 2011. She became head coach in 2022.

USA Basketball
Wyckoff played on the team presenting the USA at the 1999 World University Games held in Palma de Mallorca, Spain. The team had a 4–2 record and earned the silver medal. Wyckoff averaged 7.0 points per game and led the team in rebounding, with 7.0 per game.

She competed with USA Basketball as a member of the 2000 Jones Cup Team that won the Gold in Taipei.

Regular season

 * align="left" | 2001
 * align="left" | Orlando
 * 32||27||20.3||32.8||16.2||71.4||3.8||1.2||0.8||0.5||1.6||3.4
 * align="left" | 2002
 * align="left" | Orlando
 * 32||5||16.1||32.6||28.0||71.4||2.8||1.0||0.6||0.6||0.9||2.5
 * align="left" | 2003
 * align="left" | Connecticut
 * 34||22||22.2||38.7||28.6||72.2||4.3||1.0||1.0||0.6||1.1||4.6
 * align="left" | 2005
 * align="left" | Connecticut
 * 34||1||17.5||39.8||42.3||65.0||2.8||1.0||0.4||0.3||0.8||3.1
 * align="left" | 2006
 * align="left" | Chicago
 * 15||13||22.9||24.2||23.3||80.0||2.7||2.2||0.9||0.8||1.1||3.3
 * align="left" | 2007
 * align="left" | Chicago
 * 34||7||15.3||37.6||35.8||76.9||3.2||1.4||0.6||0.5||0.8||2.9
 * align="left" | 2008
 * align="left" | Chicago
 * 34||23||17.5||34.2||31.4||56.3||2.3||1.4||0.4||0.6||1.0||2.2
 * align="left" | 2009
 * align="left" | Chicago
 * 27||23||19.7||37.8||39.2||87.5||2.7||1.4||0.4||0.7||1.1||3.1
 * align="left" | Career
 * align="left" | 8 years, 3 teams
 * 242||121||18.6||35.2||31.4||71.0||3.1||1.3||0.6||0.5||1.0||3.1
 * 34||23||17.5||34.2||31.4||56.3||2.3||1.4||0.4||0.6||1.0||2.2
 * align="left" | 2009
 * align="left" | Chicago
 * 27||23||19.7||37.8||39.2||87.5||2.7||1.4||0.4||0.7||1.1||3.1
 * align="left" | Career
 * align="left" | 8 years, 3 teams
 * 242||121||18.6||35.2||31.4||71.0||3.1||1.3||0.6||0.5||1.0||3.1
 * align="left" | 8 years, 3 teams
 * 242||121||18.6||35.2||31.4||71.0||3.1||1.3||0.6||0.5||1.0||3.1

Playoffs

 * align="left" | 2003
 * align="left" | Connecticut
 * 4||3||22.3||43.8||16.7||75.0||3.0||1.3||0.5||0.3||0.5||4.5
 * align="left" | 2005
 * align="left" | Connecticut
 * 8||0||13.6||41.7||40.0||66.7||1.9||0.4||0.1||0.3||0.6||2.3
 * align="left" | Career
 * align="left" | 2 years, 1 team
 * 12||3||16.5||42.9||31.3||70.0||2.3||0.7||0.3||0.3||0.6||3.0
 * align="left" | Career
 * align="left" | 2 years, 1 team
 * 12||3||16.5||42.9||31.3||70.0||2.3||0.7||0.3||0.3||0.6||3.0

College
Source: