Showing posts with label women's national basketball association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women's national basketball association. Show all posts

Las Vegas Aces: 2025 WNBA Champions

 


PHOENIX -- THE MORNING after A'ja Wilson hit the game-winning shot in Game 3 of the WNBA Finals -- the basket that gave her Las Vegas Aces a 3-0 series lead and became the defining image of Wilson's already storied basketball career -- Aces coach Becky Hammon texted her superstar a graphic comparing an elk and a deer.


Hammon had used the comparison for Wilson weeks earlier, but Wilson, like most people, wasn't aware of the difference between the two. But when you see the bigger, stronger elk, said Hammon, who grew up in the Black Hills of South Dakota, you realize it's in a class of its own.

New York Liberty: 2024 WNBA Champions


 

The long wait for the Liberty is over.


After 28 years and five previous Finals appearances, New York are now champions.


In front of a raucous Brooklyn crowd at the Barclays Center, the Liberty defeated a relentless Minnesota Lynx team 67-62 in overtime in a winner-take-all Game 5 of the Finals.


It wasn’t so joyful for the Lynx, as a debatable foul decision left the team’s head coach, Cheryl Reeve, fuming after the final whistle.


With the Lynx up 60-58 and under six seconds remaining in regulation, officials whistled a foul on Minnesota’s Alanna Smith on Liberty forward Breanna Stewart. The two-time league MVP was driving to the hoop and appeared to have minimal contact with Smith as she took a shot.


The Lynx challenged the call, but the decision was upheld after a video review.


“I’m sorry but that wasn’t a foul! Let the damn players dictate the outcome of a close battled tested game,” NBA superstar LeBron James posted on X, formerly known as Twitter.


Reeve said the call “decided the game,” adding the game – and WNBA championship – was “stolen from us.”


“The officials during the game should have a third party because that was not a foul. That call should have been reversed on that challenge,” she told reporters.


“I know all the headlines will be ‘Reeve Cries Foul.’ Bring it on, right. Bring it on,” Reeve said. “Because this sh*t was stolen from us. Bring it on.”


When asked about Reeve’s complaints, Liberty head coach Sandy Brondello told reporters that she respected both her counterpart and the entire Lynx team.


“I thought they were pretty fair,” she said laughing, when asked what she thought about the officials. “I have so much respect for Cheryl and I have so much respect for that Minnesota Lynx team because, man, it was ugly, but we found a way to win.”


Brondello had been highly critical of the officiating after a Game 4 Liberty loss that forced the title decider.


The face of the NY franchise still needed to come up big to force overtime.


Without Stewart, the Lynx may have found themselves dancing to their famed celebratory “Electric Slide” at the buzzer had it not been for two-time Finals MVP.


Stewart stood at the free throw line with nerves of steel-like composure and calmly stroked both charity stripe buckets like no one was watching.


Nyara Sabally was New York’s unexpected star.


Coming into Sunday, she averaged 2.8 points per game in the Finals but came alive to score a crucial 13 points in Game 5.


The former Oregon star made an impact beyond her unforeseen offensive impact. She grabbed seven rebounds and had a key block in OT, stuffing Lynx star Napheesa Collier at the hoop when Minnesota attempted to tie the game late.


The rejection was not lost on anyone after the game. After all, Collier led the WNBA playoffs in points, rebounds, blocks, and steals.


Her teammate Stewart praised Sabally after the game.


“We were trying to do whatever we could. We needed, like a spark and she was that. She continued to trust the process and we are so proud of Ny. So proud,” she said.


How valuable was the German national team member? The typical roleplayer was often matched up to guard Collier and played the entire overtime session.


“That’s what I’ve been working for my all my career - moments like these,” she said after the game during the trophy presentation.


“And to be able to come in here and do this in a Game 5 at home, it just means the world.”


The new star then hugged her sister as tears started to well up in her eyes.


Regardless of the foul controversy, Stewart was a force on the boards, grabbing 15 rebounds to go with her 13 points.


The Liberty’s other big star, Sabrina Ionescu, struggled mightily in the game, scoring just five points on 1-of-19 shooting.


New York’s Jonquel Jones was named the Finals MVP.


The Bahamian was steady Sunday while her teammates couldn’t find their rhythm.


She scored 12 points in two quarters, nearly half of the Liberty’s production. Jones finished with 17 points and six rebounds.


Jones was modest after being handed the prestigious award and the crowd shouting ‘MVP.’


“None of this happens without my teammates and without the people that have poured into me,” she said while acknowledging her mother, her fiancĂ© and others.


The Lynx were up 34-27 at the half. If not for Jones, NY would have been in serious trouble.


The Liberty started stone cold with the Lynx opening the game on a 6-0 run. Jones finally hit a bucket to settle New York’s nerves.


Collier started hot with slashing moves to the basket for several lay-ins. After a Collier bucket to stretch the lead to 19-10 in the first quarter, Brondello called a timeout to stop the momentum. Collier finished the opening quarter with 8 points and a game-high 22 points overall.


With the Lynx up 10, Stewart finally scored her first points in the second quarter.


Despite her shooting woes, Ionescu never relented and dished out key assists.


After the Lynx emerged from their locker room cold, the former University of Oregon guard found Sabally for back-to-back buckets - the second of which put the Liberty up 40-38 and the team’s first lead.


Ionescu was pumped up after the moment – flexing as the buoyant Brooklyn crowd showered her with support.


After the win, Ionescu gave credit to her team.


“[I] just did whatever it took to win. [I] believed in my teammates, believed in this entire organization. It takes everyone; you don’t do this alone.


“God, we did it in New York,” she screamed, much to the delight of the fans.


Those same supporters have a parade to attend.


After the Liberty’s 3-2 series win, New York City Mayor Eric Adams posted on social media that “City Hall and other city buildings will be lit up seafoam in their honor. But that’s not all. We’re throwing these incredible athletes a parade to celebrate all their hard work this season.”


The first WNBA Championship in franchise history will get a ticker tape parade, which is set to start at 10 a.m. ET Thursday.


Organizers said the procession will begin at Battery Park and run north through lower Broadway’s so-called “Canyon of Heroes.”


Following the parade, City Hall will host a ceremony before the team hosts a fan event at Barclays Center that night.

Chicago Sky: 2021 WNBA Champions



CHICAGO -- James Wade said he wasn't going to cry Sunday. But after winning a WNBA championship in his third year as coach and general manager of the Chicago Sky, the occasion called for a few tears of joy, pride and gratitude, as he delivered a message he hopes will inspire other Black coaches.


"It's big to do something in this space," he said after the Sky's 80-74 victory in Game 4 of the Finals brought the franchise its first WNBA title. "And I'm just going to keep it real: I've always had to prove my intelligence. Always. So how do you do that? You do that through hard work. And they say, 'OK, he's a hard worker' -- but the hard work gets your intelligence in the room. So once you work hard, people start to listen to you.


"I've understood that from an early age, that I have to ... just be visible and represent good visibility instead of ... routine. Or the visibility that they try to put on us. So it's important, and it's going to always be important."


Wade, who signed a four-year contract extension with Chicago in January that takes him though the 2025 season, felt the Sky's victory meant something to a lot of people.


"It's not just for my son," Wade said, referring to 5-year-old Jet, who flew in from France with his mother, former WNBA player Edwige Lawson-Wade, to attend the Finals games in Chicago. "It's for every young Black kid that comes up behind me that you pre-judge. But never judge a book by its cover. I'm not perfect by no means, but I'm always trying to do the right thing, and it has nothing to do with my color.


"I know the game of basketball, and I know what it takes to be a champion. And here we are."


Wade, 46, is a native of Memphis, Tennessee, who played point guard at Kennesaw State in the 1990s and then spent more than a decade competing overseas. His wife, Lawson-Wade, is a native of France who played five years in the WNBA.


Wade got involved in WNBA coaching in 2012 with the San Antonio Stars when Dan Hughes was their head coach. Lawson-Wade had played for Hughes in San Antonio.


Hughes, who retired earlier this year after finishing his career with the Seattle Storm, was at Wintrust Arena on Sunday to see Wade win the title.


"Dan was the first person who told me that I was going to be a great head coach, and I thought he was crazy. I didn't believe him," Wade said. "Me and my wife laughed at the idea, and then my wife said, 'Maybe he sees something in you that you don't see.'"


At that, Wade began to tear up.


"To have somebody, especially a middle-aged white man who doesn't look nothing like you, doesn't come from your experiences, to say, 'Hey, look, I believe in you,'" Wade said. "I thought I was going to be an intern for him for three years, and he hired me as an assistant after the first year, and I have no idea why he did that.


"He's an amazing man, and I don't think he'll get enough credit. He changed my life. He absolutely changed my life, and I'm forever indebted to him."


But Wade made the most of the opportunity. He then spent two seasons with Minnesota as an assistant, winning a title in 2017, before taking over in Chicago. Wade is the third Black head coach to win a WNBA title, following Michael Cooper with Los Angeles in 2001 and 2002, and Corey Gaines with Phoenix in 2009.


"So now I can talk about how I grew up. I had no choice. You've got to have faith or you die," Wade said of the vision he sold to the Sky players when he took the job. "You're born behind the 8-ball, so you put that into all your experiences, and you show them how it's going to be done.


"I still remember saying that we were going to win a championship. No idea how. We did it because we believed."





Seattle Storm: 2020 WNBA Champions



BRADENTON, Fla. — Winning its second title in three years, and its fourth overall, the Seattle Storm beat the Las Vegas Aces in Game 3, 92-59, and swept the No. 1 seed in a dominant playoff run.


“It felt like a lot of pressure, the expectations were there,” head coach Gary Kloppenburg said. “These are all such good teams from top to bottom down here, every game you had to get prepared for each team in our league. It’s such a high level of basketball, so I’m just really proud of our group, they just stayed together through a lot of weird stuff, it was weird playing a season in a Wubble. It’s been historic for our team and the league.”


Finals MVP Breanna Stewart scored 26 points, Sue Bird dropped seven assists, and the Storm ran away with the game early in the second half.


After the first quarter, the Storm led the Aces, 23-21, trading baskets for most of the opening frame and shooting 57.9% from the field. Stewart led the way, scoring almost half of Seattle’s points with 11.


With Stewart in foul trouble in the second quarter, Loyd picked up the scoring load, scoring 10 points by halftime and helping Seattle separate, leading 43-34. The Storm’s defense held the Aces to just 40.6% shooting, and carried that momentum over into the second half.


The Storm outscored the Aces 32-14 in the third quarter, shooting 66.7% from the field and blowing the game completely open with a balanced scoring attack. Through three quarters, Seattle held Las Vegas to just 36.7% shooting and forced 15 turnovers.


“As we got going I thought our intensity, our energy and our disruption really picked up,” Kloppenburg said. “The way we came out in the third was just tremendous, we wanted to come out and take their confidence away in that third quarter and we did a really good job of it.”


Seattle opened the floodgates in the third and early in the fourth quarter, taking as large as a 35-point lead late in the game.


The Storm featured four double-digit scorers, shot nearly 50% from the field, and held the Aces to just 34.4% shooting for the dominant win in Game 3. Leading the way, Stewart won the second Finals MVP of her career, she’s one of just five players in league history to do so.


“She’s one of those players, a generational player, that comes through once in a while,” Kloppenburg said. “To face adversity and even get stronger because of it. I think that’s what we saw with her. She missed a whole year and she came back as a better player in pretty much every category on both sides of the ball.”


TOP STAT TO KNOW


#SayHerName: It has been 207 days since Breonna Taylor was shot and killed in her own apartment. There has still been no justice.


SEATTLE HIGHLIGHTS


Sue Bird is the only player in WNBA history to win a championship in three separate decades, and just the third professional basketball player to accomplish the feat all time.

Breanna Stewart has won Finals MVP for the second time in her career already, just the fifth WNBA player of all-time to win the award more than once.

Bird set multiple assist records over the course of the Finals, with her latest being her 33 assists in a Finals sweep, the highest total of all-time.

Stewart’s 85 points in a Finals sweep is the second most in WNBA history, with just Angel McCoughtry scoring more in the current Finals format, back in 2011 with the Atlanta Dream, of 93.

Jordin Canada’s 15 points were a Finals career-high, and it’s the second straight game Canada has logged double-digit scoring.