For many women, choosing to take a career break to raise a family can feel like a terrifying decision. You don’t know how it will impact your long-term goals and finances, not to mention how it will affect your self-worth. You also might be worried about struggling to re-enter the workforce when — and if — you decide to come back.
That’s how Danyelle Sargent Musselman felt in 2013 when she decided to step away from a successful career in sports broadcasting to take care of her then 3-year-old daughter, Mariah. But looking back, she wouldn’t have done anything differently.
“You never know what comes next when you walk away from your career,” Sargent Musselman, 45 told Know Your Value. “But that does not mean that there’s nothing next. You will find a new way and you’ll find a new passion. That’s what happened in my life.”
Sargent Musselman, who is married to Eric Musselman, the head men’s basketball coach at the University of Arkansas, is heavily involved with the day-to-day operations of the team. “It’s like I am the mom of 15 boys that are very, very tall,” she joked. She also works with several philanthropic initiatives and frequently hosts fundraising events for organizations like Coaches vs. Cancer, Make-A-Wish Foundation, New Beginnings and more. She noted her broadcasting career – which included jobs at Fox Sports, ESPN and the NFL Network – helped open up many of those new opportunities.
Know Your Value recently chatted with Sargent Musselman about her career in sports broadcasting, breaking into a male-dominated field as a woman of color, her decision to pivot careers and more.
Below is the conversation, which has been edited for brevity and clarity:
Know Your Value: Tell us about your decision in 2013 to take a career break from sports broadcasting to take care of your daughter. Were you nervous about the decision, and what did you learn?
Sargent Musselman: I was working at NFL Network. I had a great job, but my husband had just gotten into college basketball, which is way more year-round than the NBA. My daughter was 3 years old, and we had gotten to the point where we had a live-in nanny, where we saw each other two days a week. I was living in Arizona, and I was flying down to LA to work for three days, and then flying back. And then [my husband] was traveling with work and recruiting and all of that.
I remember after the Super Bowl, I said to my [employer], “I’ve gotta take some time off.” And they asked how long. And I’m thinking it’s the off season, so maybe a couple of months. And they said, “Well, how about a couple of weeks?” I had a talk with my husband, and I said, “I can’t do this anymore. It’s not working for our family.”
And so, I just kind of just jumped out of it. I put in my notice, and I really had no idea what I was gonna do next aside from being a wife and a mom. And that was definitely scary. And I think whenever you’re so passionate and you love a career, as much as I love sports broadcasting, you kind of think that maybe that’s it for you … you’re not gonna have any more amazing experiences.
I just want to tell people that that’s not the case. You might not know what’s gonna happen next, but you know, I was in my 30s, and to think that “OK, that’s over,” it’s kind of sad. And so eventually I started getting into philanthropy … And it was funny because it was my background as a broadcaster that helped. I started hosting fundraising events, and then soon everyone was asking me … and so that was really cool. And then since moving here to Arkansas, even more [philanthropic] opportunities have opened up.
…For any woman who is walking away from a career, especially a career that they really love, it is scary. And you might feel lost for a little bit…You might lose some of your confidence. I remember I was at a preschool book fair a week after I left the NFL Network. And I’m looking at myself like “OK, is this what I’m doing now?” You know what though? It was OK. You get through it.
Know Your Value: You call yourself the ‘GM of Team Musselman.’ What does that entail? Walk us through your typical day.
Sargent Musselman: I call myself that because when my husband is coaching, and especially during the season, being a coach is just an all-encompassing job. And so, he really has to spend a lot of his time focused on that. So, it kind of leaves everything else up to me. And I also have things that I’m dealing with this team. So, I’m putting out those fires, and then I’m dealing with the things at home. And then I’m very much involved in philanthropy. And we have a 12-year-old daughter who’s at home, and then I have a 22-year-old stepson who is a senior in college and then a 26-year-old stepson who lives here and works for my husband. I call myself [the GM of Team Musselman] because on any given day, I feel like I’m balancing like seven different things. I’m just kind of the general manager that holds it all together.
[With the team], we really try to promote a family atmosphere among not just our players that are on the team, but it really extends to their families … Eric really likes to have like the kids and their families over to our home, or it’s sometimes stopping by practice and meeting them, just answering questions that are not related to basketball for these kids and their families. I mean, these are just kids. We have six freshmen on our team, so it’s having them over for dinner, helping them. A lot of these kids are away from home for the first time…









