LSU has set a date for its trip to the White House.

According to The Advocate’s Scott Rabalais, the Tigers will visit the White House on Friday, May 26, to meet with President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden. A ceremony will honor their 2022-2023 NCAA Championship season.

LSU beat Iowa 102-85 last month in Dallas to claim the program’s first national championship in women’s basketball. LSU emerged victorious in the highest-scoring championship game in women’s NCAA history after one of the best-received tournaments the sport has ever had. Angel Reese broke the NCAA single-season record for double-doubles in the title win, and was later awarded the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player.

But drama followed the victory, specifically with regard to a White House visit.

After Jill Biden suggested Iowa should make the presidential trip alongside LSU — something that simply isn’t done — Reese and her teammates took offense and said they might instead visit former First Lady Michelle Obama.

“If we were to lose, we would not be getting invited to the White House,” Reese said at the time. “I remember she made a comment about both teams should be invited because it’s sportsmanship. And I’m like, ‘Are you saying that stuff because of what I did?’ Stuff like that, it bothers me. You are a woman at the end of the day and you’re supposed to be standing behind us before anything… I don’t accept the (apology), I said what I said.”

Both Iowa head coach Lisa Bluder and star guard Caitlin Clark rejected the idea, and Jill Biden later apologized for the comment.

Since, things have smoothed over a bit, with Reese saying she plans to go with the team during its visit to the nation’s capital.

“Yeah, I’m a team player, I’m going to do what’s best for the team, and I’m the captain,” Reese said. “I know the team would love it and going back home and hopefully my cousin, they won the national championship too, so hopefully I can see them then.”

Reese’s cousin is UConn star Jordan Hawkins. The Huskies won the men’s national championship and, according to The Advocate, will attend the White House on the same day as LSU for their own separate ceremony.