Arianna Roberson grew up in a house where high-level sports were part of daily life. Long before she became a Duke center and one of the top recruits in her class, she was the youngest child in a family built around basketball, volleyball and the kind of competition that leaves a mark on every sibling who comes after.
Her parents, John and Lisa Roberson, both played at New Mexico State, with John on the basketball side and Lisa in volleyball.
Arianna is the youngest of seven children, and every one of her older siblings has taken the athletic path in some form.
A family that already knew the road
The Roberson family name carries real weight in South Texas basketball circles. Arianna’s older brother André Roberson played in the NBA for seven seasons, while Ashlee played basketball at Texas Tech, Amber played volleyball at Texas, Arielle played basketball at Colorado and West Virginia, Anthony played at Central Oklahoma and in the Thunder G League setup, and Aaliyah has played at TCU.
That is the backdrop Arianna stepped into, and it explains why people around Clark High School talked about her as much for her last name as for her own game.
What stands out is that Arianna did not arrive at basketball through the usual early, nonstop route. Duke’s own notes say she did not start playing basketball until middle school and split her time between hoops and volleyball.
That detail fits the family perfectly. She grew up in an athletic environment, but she still had to find her own rhythm and decide which sport would become her lane.

John and Lisa were there from the start, and their presence has remained constant through every stage of her rise.
When Arianna revealed her Duke choice at Clark High School, she stood on stage with her parents beside her, a reminder that this was never just a solo journey.
It was the latest chapter in a family that has spent decades turning athletic talent into college scholarships, postseason runs and pro careers.
Arianna’s own path at Clark and Duke
By the time she reached Clark High School in San Antonio, Arianna had become a national name in her own right.
Duke lists her as a 6-foot-4 center, a redshirt freshman, and a former No. 17 overall prospect in the espnW 2024 class. Her prep résumé includes McDonald’s All-American, Nike Hoop Summit, District 28-6A Co-MVP, TABC 6A All-State, and a senior season that produced 18.0 points, 13.0 rebounds and 3.0 blocks per game while leading Clark to a 33-3 record.
As a junior, she posted 15.0 points, 11.0 rebounds, 4.0 blocks and 2.0 steals per game and helped Clark win its first state championship. She also earned four years of varsity letters in volleyball.
That combination of size, timing and two-sport background made her one of the most intriguing players in the country.
Duke’s game notes also point out that after missing 440 days because of injury, she returned to the court and quickly started to settle in again.
The same notes show how quickly she has become important to the Blue Devils, with steady rebounding, efficient scoring and the kind of defensive presence that fits the Roberson family profile.
There is also a clear sense that Arianna has embraced both the legacy and the pressure that come with it.
In an earlier Clark profile, she put it plainly: she wanted to follow her family’s footsteps while still building her own path. That idea has shaped the story from the beginning.
She is not simply another Roberson sibling. She is the youngest one, the one who came last, but also the one carving out her own place at Duke.
Off the court, her name has recently surfaced in connection with Dallas Mavericks rookie Cooper Flagg.
The two confirmed their relationship on social media this week after weeks of speculation, with Roberson posting vacation clips and Flagg sharing a photo of the pair together.
What makes Arianna Roberson stand out is not only that she comes from a famous athletic family.
It is that she grew up inside a home where success was normal, then took that expectation and made it her own. John and Lisa Roberson gave their children a blueprint. Arianna is still writing her version of it.
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