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Reliving the 2019 PLL Season

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Nick Pietras

Nick Pietras has been coaching lacrosse in the city of Detroit since 2019. He currently serves as the assistant creative director creating content and helping manage the image of Detroit United. He is currently attending Lourdes University pursuing a double major in marketing and business administration. Over the course of his senior year, Nick would tear both of his ACL’s leaving him to miss his senior season. He would play for the Lourdes University Gray Wolves for one year before his lingering knee injuries would abruptly end his college career. This is where his coaching career officially began as he became the offensive coordinator for his alma mater, Cousino High School. He would be one of the main influencers in the creation of Warren Consolidated Schools joint high school program and would oversee fundraising, marketing, and design endeavors. Six months later, Nick would be brought to Detroit to join the Cass Tech High School men’s lacrosse coaching staff as the defensive coordinator.

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NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer time Cup Kicks Off Membership Match

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While the 2024 All-Star Game doesn’t tip off until Saturday, this year’s WNBA Skills Challenge and STARRY 3-Point Contest promise to light up Phoenix’s Footprint Center on Friday.

The evening’s programming will allow fans to watch as towering center Brittney Griner shows off her speed and mobility before putting 2024’s most statistically excellent three-point shooters to the test.

In addition to the two annual events, the night will also showcase the first-ever WNBA All-Star 3×3 Exhibition, with the Olympic-bound 3×3 National Team taking on USA Basketball’s 3×3 U23 National Team.

To make things even more interesting, Aflac has promised to supplement the Skills Competition and 3-Point Contest’s prize pool with a $55,000 bonus for each winner.

Mercury center Brittney Griner will test her speed at the All-Star Skills Challenge. (Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images)

Skills Challenge highlights league’s best

Perhaps the least straightforward event in Friday’s series, the Skills Challenge — in which five players will compete in a timed obstacle course testing their dribbling, passing, speed, and shooting abilities —should come down to the wire. Each contestant will attempt to complete the course as quickly as possible, with the two fastest first-round players advancing to a head-to-head final.

Ten-time WNBA All-Star Griner (Phoenix) headlines the Skills Challenge roster, accompanied by Mercury teammate Sophie Cunningham as well as Allisha Gray (Atlanta), 2019 WNBA All-Star MVP Erica Wheeler (Indiana), and newly acquired Connecticut guard Marina Mabrey.

Mabrey will be competing in both the Skills Challenge and 3-Point Contest, taking the court for the first time since her requested trade from Chicago sent her the Sun.

Team WNBA's Jonquel Jones lines up a shot at Friday's All-Star practice.
Liberty ace Jonquel Jones leads Friday’s stacked 3-Point Contest lineup. (Alex Slitz/Getty Images)

Top shooters put their skills on display

Despite Sabrina Ionescu and Caitlin Clark reportedly declining to participate, some of the WNBA’s best shooters will be on display in tonight’s STARRY 3-Point Contest. Shooters will tally up points from five set shooting locations around the arc plus two additional “Starry Range” deep shots worth three points each.

2021 WNBA MVP Jonquel Jones (New York) will enter a battle of the bigs with Washington’s Stefanie Dolson, who sits second in the league in three-point field goal percentage this season with 48.5%.

But Jones and Dolson will face stiff competition from Kayla McBride (Minnesota), who leads the league in three-pointers made, as well as the aforementioned Gray and Mabrey.

Team USA 3x3 players Cierra Burdick, Hailey Van Lith, Rhyne Howard, and Dearica Hamby
Team USA’s Cierra Burdick, Hailey Van Lith, Rhyne Howard, and Dearica Hamby will take on their U-23 counterparts in Friday’s new 3×3 Exhibition. (Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images)

WNBA All-Star Weekend adds 3×3 Exhibition to the mix

Tonight’s debut 3×3 Exhibition will serve as a warmup for Team USA’s Rhyne Howard (Atlanta), former WNBA player Cierra Burdick, college star Hailey Van Lith (TCU), and Dearica Hamby (Los Angeles), who came on to replace Sparks teammate Cameron Brink after her season-ending ACL tear.

The Olympians’ U-23 opposition is also gearing up for a major event, with collegiate squad members Christina Dalce (Maryland), Morgan Maly (Creighton), Cotie McMahon (Ohio State), Lucy Olsen (Iowa), Mikaylah Williams (LSU), and Serah Williams (Wisconsin) set to play in the 2024 FIBA 3×3 Nations League tournament in Mexico City starting July 22nd.

Where to watch the WNBA Skills Challenge and 3-Point Contest

All three events will air on ESPN starting at 9 PM ET on Friday, July 19th.



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2024 Olympics: Will Workforce USA win some other girls’s basketball gold?

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A information to the Paris 2024 Olympic Video games

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🇫🇷 Bienvenue à Paris

Beach volleyball in front of the Eiffel Tower, equestrian events at the Château de Versailles, and a first-of-its-kind opening ceremony on the famous Seine river — how can you not be romantic about Paris 2024?

  • The City of Light boasts over 2M people and iconic sites — from the Louvre to the Arc de Triomphe — plus exquisite fashion and cuisine. The millions of sports fans descending on Paris are in for a magnifique (and expensive) treat.

The Paris Games, by the numbers: Over 10K athletes, representing 206 nations, will compete in 329 events across 32 sports. Competitions will be hosted in 35 venues — 14 of which are within 10km of the Olympic Village.

  • Most athletes will compete in mainland France, but Olympic surfers will be dropping into waves in the French territory of Tahiti, nearly 10K miles away from Paris. Riding the South Pacific island’s legendary Teahupo’o waves will certainly be worth the trip.

History buffs, rejoice: This year’s Paris edition is taking place exactly 100 years after the City of Light hosted its last summer Olympics in 1924, and this week it will join London as the only cities to host the Summer Games three times.

  • Even better? Every Olympic medal includes a part of Parisian history, embedded with original iron from the 1889-built Eiffel Tower. All that glitters isn’t only gold.

🎉 Gender parity in Paris

Source: David Ramos/Getty Images

The competition hasn’t even started yet, but this year’s Games are already historic Paris is the closest Olympics to gender parity in the event’s history. And while this year’s Games will fall just short of its goal of complete equality, with an Olympic-record 49% of competing athletes identifying as women, there’s still plenty to celebrate.

  • Making history isn’t new for Parisians: Back in 1900, Paris became the first Games to allow women to participate. How do you say leveling the playing field en français?

The relay toward gender parity: Only 22 women took part in that 1900 Olympics — less than 3% of the 997 total participants. Before this year’s edition, the closest the Games had ever come to gender parity was Tokyo 2020, where 47.8% of competing athletes were women.

  • The increase is partially due to the debut of new events, like the women’s Canoe sprint, and sports, including surfing and skateboarding, which changed the equal participation game by providing more opportunities for women athletes.

Passing the torch to Paris: Tokyo 2020 paved the way for Paris 2024, where there are 152 medal events for women, 157 medal events for men, and 20 mixed-gender events — meaning women can compete for over half the medals at a second straight Summer Olympics.

  • What’s more, purposeful scheduling will help women’s and men’s events receive balanced media coverage, making women’s sports more accessible to fans worldwide.
  • Case in point? For the first time in Olympic history, the women’s marathon — not the men’s — will take center stage on August 11th, the final day of competition. Absolutely love to see it.

🏅 Athletes to know: The veterans

Source: Jamie Squire/Getty Images

🇺🇸 Simone Biles, women’s gymnastics: After pulling out of the Tokyo Olympics with a case of “the twisties,” Biles is back and better than ever. The GOAT — the most decorated gymnast in history — will be competing in her third career Games and looks poised to add to a résumé that already includes seven Olympic medals. Flippin’ fantastic.

🇨🇦 Summer McIntosh, women’s swimming: Not many swimmers can match the teenage phenom’s versatility heading into her second Games: McIntosh holds the 400m individual medley world record, beat the aforementioned Ledecky in an 800m freestyle final earlier this year, and is a two-time world champ in the 200m butterfly. What, like it’s hard?

🇪🇸 Rafael Nadal, men’s tennis: The “King of Clay” will be in familiar territory on the Roland-Garros court, where he’s won a staggering 14 Grand Slam titles. Yes, the 38-year-old’s dominant career is nearing its end, but there’d be no better way to cap it off than with Olympic gold — perhaps alongside doubles partner and fellow clay standout, Carlos Alcaraz.

🇰🇪 Eliud Kipchoge, men’s marathon: Despite a disappointing 10th-place finish at the Tokyo Marathon in March, the Kenyan is racing for a record-breaking third consecutive Olympic gold medal. If he’s at his best, he certainly has the pace — Kipchoge was the first person ever to complete the 26.2-mile race in under two hours, a feat he accomplished in 2019.

🇬🇧 Sky Brown, women’s skateboarding: A 13-year-old Brown won bronze in park skateboarding at the Tokyo Games, making her Britain’s youngest-ever Olympic medalist. Now aged 16, the skateboarding prodigy is back for more despite tearing her MCL in April. Never back down, never what?



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Olympic Gold Medalists Kelley O’Hara, Lisa Leslie Host New JWS Display

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Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper has been working toward this year’s WNBA All-Star Weekend for a long time.

2024 won’t be Copper’s first trip to the All-Star Game — in fact, she’s been an All-Star for four consecutive seasons. This weekend also won’t be Copper’s greatest individual achievement to date. Afterall, it’s tough to beat winning Finals MVP as part of the 2021 WNBA Champion Chicago Sky. And this year isn’t even Copper’s first time playing the All-Star Game in her home arena; that was in Chicago in 2022.

But this will be Copper’s first All-Star Weekend as an Olympian, a title she’s been striving for since the moment the Tokyo Games ended in August 2021. Back then, the 29-year-old had been one of Team USA’s final roster cuts prior to the Olympics. And from that day forward, she made it her mission to channel  her disappointment into becoming an indispensable part of the 2024 Paris Olympic squad

“I wouldn’t change my process for anything,” she told Just Women’s Sports earlier this week as she prepared to join the national team at training camp in Phoenix. “I’m super grateful for it, it has definitely prepared me. It’s a testament to my work ethic, and me just really being persistent about what it is that I want.”

A proud product of North Philadelphia, Copper has always been big on manifesting, speaking her intentions confidently into the universe and never shying away from  ambitions no matter how far-fetched they sounded.

“It’s important to set goals, manifest those things, talk about it,” she said. “Because the more you speak it, you speak it into existence.” 

She also displays those goals on her refrigerator at home, forcing herself to keep them front of mind every day. The day she was named to the Olympic roster, ESPN’s Holly Rowe posted one of these visual reminders to social media: A 2021 photo showing Copper wearing a Team USA t-shirt over her Chicago Sky warmups, smiling at the camera while holding up the homemade gold medal slung around her neck.

“Kahleah Copper put out [the] photo on the left in Aug. 2021 and manifested that she WOULD be an Olympian,” Rowe’s caption read. “Today she made team USA. Dreams to reality.” 

The 2024 Paris Games will mark Copper’s Olympic debut. (Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images)

Copper turns her focus to Team USA

With one dream realized, Copper is aware that the job isn’t finished, as USA women’s basketball is aiming to win a historic eighth-straight Olympic gold medal in Paris this summer. That path doesn’t technically begin with All-Star Weekend — where Team USA will take on Team WNBA in a crucial tune-up game — but the trial run could make a difference when the team touches down in Europe next week.

“It’s serious, because other countries, they spend a lot of time together, so their chemistry is great,” Copper said of her Olympic competition. “We don’t get that, we don’t have that much time together. Just putting all the great players together is not enough. It’s gonna take a lot more than that.”

With a laugh, Copper acknowledged that Team USA’s task at hand could lightly dampen the occasionally raucous All-Star festivities (“Balance!” was an oft-repeated word). But it’s a cost she and her national team colleagues are more than willing to pay if it helps them come out on top in Paris. 

Of course, Copper — along with club teammates Diana Taurasi and Brittney Griner — will be enjoying home-court advantage when the All-Star Game tips off inside Phoenix’s Footprint Center on Saturday, a factor that might put them slightly more at ease. 

WNBA players kahleah copper and candace parker celebrating winning the 2021 championship with the chicago sky
Copper won a WNBA Championship in 2021 alongside one of her idols, Candace Parker. (Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

A “damn near perfect” new WNBA team

Copper made the move to the Mercury just this season after establishing herself as a respected star in Chicago. What she joined was a work in progress, one of a number of key 2024 signings under first-time head coach Nate Tibbetts. Having played for the Sky since 2017, Copper wasn’t exactly sure what to expect of the transition. But any positive manifestations she put out about her new team seemed to have done the trick.

“I said I would never go to the West Coast, I could never go that far from home,” she said. “But I didn’t know that this organization was what it was: Super professional, really taking care of everything. It’s damn near perfect.”

Copper herself has been damn near perfect, shooting 45% from the field while leading sixth-place Phoenix to a 13-12 record on the season. She’s also averaging a career-high 23.2 points per game, second highest in the league behind soon-to-be six-time WNBA All-Star A’ja Wilson’s 27.2 points per game. It’s not lost on Copper that she’s playing in front of packed houses, with the Mercury accounting for some of the W’s biggest crowds throughout its 28-year run. 

“Here in Phoenix, our fans are amazing,” Copper said. “They show up every single night.”

Phoenix Mercury player Kahleah Copper poses on the court before the 2023 WNBA All-Star Game
Copper will play in her fourth consecutive All-Star Game on Saturday. (Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)

Copper’s All-Star home-court advantage

All-Star Weekend presents Copper even more opportunities to connect with her new city, including by making an appearance at American Express’s interactive fan experience at WNBA Live 2024. As part of the activation, Copper recorded a few short stories about growing up a basketball fan, describing the posters of Candace Parker, Seimone Augustus, and Ivory Latta she had as a child, and how she dreamed of joining her idols as a professional basketball player. 

The Rutgers grad said she was excited about connecting with Phoenix fans on their level, rooting herself in a shared love of the sport even as she moves from watching the WNBA on TV to becoming one of its brightest stars. The message is clear: If you want something bad enough, and you work for it hard enough, just about anything is possible.

But for all of Copper’s personal manifestations, she’s never lost sight of the most important thing: winning. And she won’t stop grinding until she’s posing for the cameras in Paris, holding up a real Olympic gold medal.

“When winning comes, the other stuff will come,” she said. “The individual sh*t will come.”



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FIBA: How Group USA, different contenders charted paths to Paris Olympics

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The 2024 Olympic Games in Paris officially open on July 26. The women’s 5×5 basketball competition starts July 28, with the women’s 3×3 competition tipping off on July 30.

Before the Games begin, here’s a look back at Swish Appeal’s coverage of the preparations for Paris by Team USA, the Canadian national team and the other national teams contending for a spot on the medal stand:


Team USA’s journey to another gold

Members of Team USA gather after practicing for the 2024 WNBA All-Star Game.
Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images

Winners of seven-straight gold medals with an eighth expected, Team USA’s drama often occurs off the court, rather than on the court. “Who will be on the team?,” not, “Will we win?,” is the question that causes consternation.

This year, the scrutiny around of the selection process was intensified by the Caitlin Clark Effect, with fans and analysts marshaling various arguments to insist that the No. 1 pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft must be on the squad. That she wasn’t chosen indicates that USA Basketball, often accused of prioritizing things beyond basketball skill when selecting Olympic rosters, resisted falling prey to popularity, and all the intersecting biases that fuel it, when naming the final roster.

Furthermore, the selection process began long before the hotly-debated announcement in early June. USA Basketball began prepping for Paris last fall, with exhibition games against Duke and Tennessee.

Next was a February training camp, followed by the FIBA Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Antwerp, Belgium, where the Americans, already having punched their ticket to Paris due to their status as the defending World Cup champions, faced a tough test from the Belgium before cruising to wins over Nigeria and Senegal.

USA Basketball hosted another training camp in April before the 12 who will head to Paris were announced in June.

On Saturday, Team USA took the court together for the first time only to be shown up by Team WNBA in the 2024 WNBA All-Star Game. Considering the Olympians also fell to the All-Stars in 2021, the loss should not cause alarm; rather, it underscores that the Americans must quickly establish cohesion and constantly maintain focus in order to meet sky-high expectations in Paris.

Team USA 3×3 seeks second-straight gold

2024 WNBA All Star - Skills Challenge & 3-Point Contest

Members of the 3×3 Olympic team high five and huddle during their exhibition game at WNBA All-Star 2024.
Photo by Dylan Goodman/NBAE via Getty Images

As Paris will be just the second Olympic Games to feature 3×3 basketball, the sport has yet to establish the cultural purchase of 5×5 basketball, meaning the composition of the final roster inspires much less inspection. Nonetheless, the right to represent the red, white and blue is quite the achievement for the quartet that will head to Paris. Unfortunately, an ACL injury will prevent Cameron Brink from enjoying that opportunity; instead, her Los Angeles Sparks teammate Dearica Hamby will join Rhyne Howard, Cierra Burdick and Hailey Van Lith in the quest for gold.

The foursome received a primetime test last Friday—and passed. Team USA defeated their U23 counterparts, 19-16, at WNBA All-Star Friday Night.

Canada’s medal quest

Japan v Canada

Rising Canadian star Aaliyah Edwards will compete in her second Olympic Games.
Photo by Kevin Light/Getty Images

The Canadians sport their most talented team in program history, with a quartet of WNBA players looking to lead Canada to the medal that eluded them at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

Qualification, however, was a bit of an adventure for the Canadians. After losing to Japan at the FIBA Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Sopron, Hungary, Canada’s Olympic hopes were saved by Spain’s victory over Hungary, which required a more than 20-point comeback. Canada has to hope such fortune from the basketball gods follows them to Paris.

The rest of the world will be ready

Preparation Match - Germany Woman v Nigeria Woman

Germany and Nigeria met in a pre-Olympic match on Friday, July 19.
Photo by Bruno Dietrich/ City-Press GmbH Bildagentur via Getty Images

The Canadians were not the only national team that experienced a extra dose of drama when attempting to punch their ticket to Paris. The Serbian national team, led by former Texas standout Yvonne Anderson, battled with the host Brazilians at the FIBA Women’s Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Belém to earn a second-straight trip the Olympic Games.

The qualifying tournament in Belém also was a celebratory site for the German national team, which earned its first Olympic berth in program history. Through qualification, China, Puerto Rico, Australia, Japan, Spain, Belgium and Nigeria also earned their passports to Paris, while the French national team, including rising star Janelle Salaün, automatically qualified for the 12-team Olympic competition. The D’Tigress of Nigeria will be making their third overall, and second-straight, Olympic appearance, with Tomi Taiwo and Ify Okoro ready to lead their country to its best Olympic finish.

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Ladies’s Lacrosse Laws Will have to Proceed to Evolve 

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Charlotte North shot a lacrosse ball 92 miles an hour during the skills challenge at the Premier Lacrosse League All-Star game in Louisville earlier in July. 92 miles an hour, that’s legit for any level. North is the Caitlyn Clark of lacrosse, a trailblazer, a bona fide star and the first female to eclipse 90 mph. I would anticipate that within the next five years that threshold will become commonplace. The next generation may even approach 100 miles per hour. North is the outlier now, undoubtedly, she will have company in the 90 mph club in short time. 

The 90 plus radar clocking is noteworthy because I’m concerned about the health and safety of field players who are potentially innocent targets from high velocity shots and cringe at the thought of a player (teammate or opposing defender) being pegged by 92 mile an hour fastball to the face, chest, head or neck area. A shot could easily ricochet off the pipe. It’s worth mentioning that Charlotte has shown expert discretion in her career. 

With excessive velocity comes responsibility. Obviously, women’s players do not wear helmets other than the goalie. Men’s goalies have been besieged by concussions. Goalie helmets need to be upgraded, a story for another day.  Eye protection is the only armor in the women’s game. This extreme velocity combined with no protection is a ticking time bomb. 

Credit to: Athletes Unlimited

I get the feeling that the rules of the game have not kept up with the athletic excellence. The rules were not designed to be played with lacrosse sticks with sizeable pockets and players who can shoot the ball in the 90 mile an hour range. What looks like innovative stick design has greatly shifted the balance of power between ball carrier and defender. When the ball doesn’t come out of the pocket, defenders get more physical. Ball retention changes the way defense is played. Just plug in some YouTube videos of women’s lacrosse from 1990, 2000, 2010 and 2024. The metamorphosis is undeniable. 

The women’s rules, to their credit, are built to prevent step-down shots with dangerous shots and shooting space calls – but the capacity of modern day elite shooters far exceeds what the rule makers ever thought possible. The game is evolving, the rules need to keep pace. Behind-the-back and no look shots, trend on Twitter, but can be dangerous with little regard for defensive posture. 

Credit to: Athletes Unlimited

The offensive area is congested with 14 field players around the arc. We are seeing more zone defensive schemes that further clog the field. Rule makers would be shrewd to scale it back to a 6 on 6 in half-field sets. Create more space and less contact. Collisions are escalating on a yearly basis. Vicious hammer cross-checks to the shoulders, ribs, upper arms and hips have become an every possession occurrence. Any thrust should be called. Forceful cross-checking must be eradicated. Take a look at the bruises. Players are compelled to wear pads on their upper arms and ribs.

The offensive counterpart to cross-checking has become flopping, the embellishment of contact between ball carrier and defender. Flopping is rampant. It’s actually a penalty that’s not being called often. Too many players end up on the ground, wriggling in discomfort like a European soccer diva. 

Credit to: Athletes Unlimited

Women’s field lacrosse is on a trajectory to become men’s lacrosse. Full pads. Maybe that’s the answer. Women’s college hockey is in a good place. Women’s box lacrosse is full pads with modified contact. Perhaps helmets and pads are inevitable. 

Women’s lacrosse has never been more difficult to officiate. It’s part women’s basketball and part men’s lacrosse. I do not envy officials who make their living in this gray area. For a variety of reasons, the rules must continue to evolve. Ensuring Safety is most critical to the games health. Finding the sweet spot between effective rules, safety and style of play is a tricky waltz. 


Athletes Unlimited Pro Women’s Lacrosse 2024 is Underway

You can watch the Athletes Unlimited pro women in action this week: Thursday July 25 5pm on ESPNU and Sunday July 28 at noon on ESPN2 live from USA Lacrosse Headquarters in Sparks, MD. Four weeks of games culminating on August 11 with Joe Beninati and Courtney Martinez Connor on the call. Keep in mind AU rules are different from high school and college. 

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Crew WNBA upsets Crew USA for the second one time in highly spiced All-Megastar Sport matchup

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The GIST: In case you missed the memes, WNBA All-Star Weekend (ASW) turned 115-degree Phoenix into Arizona’s hottest club. From the Atlanta Dream’s Allisha Gray’s Skills Challenge payday to Saturday’s spicy, sold-out All-Star Game (ASG), here’s what made this ASW extra special.

The ASG format: Unlike the lackluster performances at February’s NBA All-Star Game, Saturday’s WNBA showdown between Team USA’s Olympians and Team WNBA’s All-Stars was intense, with Team WNBA surging to a 117–109 upset win in front of 16,407 fans.

  • The dub makes Team WNBA a two-time winner in this format, which was last used in 2021 ahead of the Tokyo Olympics.

The stars: Just like in 2021, Team WNBA’s Arike Ogunbowale (pronounced ah-REE-kay oh-goon-bow-WAH-lay) was named All-Star MVP after scoring 34 points to spark her squad’s comeback win. Even more impressive? All of the Dallas Wings’ star’s points were scored in the second half. Never back down, never what?

  • Though the Team USA postgame locker room chat was probably strained, hopes remain high for the squad to win an eighth consecutive Olympic gold, with Breanna Stewart (NY Liberty) and A’ja Wilson (Las Vegas Aces) combining for 53 of the team’s ASG points.
  • And we’d be remiss not to mention Allisha Gray — on Friday, she became the first player to win both the Skills Challenge and 3-Point Contest to take home over $110K in the process, more than half of her usual $185K WNBA salary. Sheesh.

Zooming out: Without an Olympics or FIBA World Cup next year, the onus is on the WNBA to recreate the passion of this year’s ASW without pitting Team USA against league All-Stars. But commissioner Cathy Engelbert is already thinking about the league’s evolution, announcing a possible 44-game regular season in 2025. The best is yet to come.



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WNBA: Report tickets gross sales for All-Megastar Sport in Phoenix

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During a season of record interest in the league, WNBA All-Star 2024 in Phoenix is about to shatter some records of its own. The demand for the All-Star Game in Phoenix outpaces previous years. Sales for this year’s All-Star Game are already more than double that of last year’s final game sales on StubHub; over the last three years, sales have increased by a factor of 13.

Tickets for Saturday’s game at the Footprint Center start at $130 on StubHub. The most expensive is $50,345, sold as part of a package deal valued at over $100,000. Adam Budelli, spokesperson for StubHub, said:

The incredible demand for the WNBA, a trend amongst women’s sports, is evident in this weekend’s WNBA All-Star Game, which currently has more than double the sales of last year’s All-Star game in Las Vegas. We are continuing to see the strong demand from season kick off sustain through the season.

And the interest is well justified. While the Indiana Fever’s Caitlin Clark and New York Liberty’s Sabrina Ionescu opted out of the 3-Point Contest, seeing them play against each other on the court—hopefully exchanging long-distance shots—will definitely be something to admire for the casual fan. Longstanding WNBA fans will probably pay closer attention to the likes of the Minnesota Lynx’s Kayla McBride, who’s been awesome this season and who’s one of the biggest Olympic snubs. The duel between established stars and the young, hungry next generation should deliver on its promise. Fans in the arena, as well as those watching at home, won’t be disappointed.



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2024 WNBA All-Big name Sport Preview: Olympians vs. Fan Favorites

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Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper has been working toward this year’s WNBA All-Star Weekend for a long time.

2024 won’t be Copper’s first trip to the All-Star Game — in fact, she’s been an All-Star for four consecutive seasons. This weekend also won’t be Copper’s greatest individual achievement to date. Afterall, it’s tough to beat winning Finals MVP as part of the 2021 WNBA Champion Chicago Sky. And this year isn’t even Copper’s first time playing the All-Star Game in her home arena; that was in Chicago in 2022.

But this will be Copper’s first All-Star Weekend as an Olympian, a title she’s been striving for since the moment the Tokyo Games ended in August 2021. Back then, the 29-year-old had been one of Team USA’s final roster cuts prior to the Olympics. And from that day forward, she made it her mission to channel  her disappointment into becoming an indispensable part of the 2024 Paris Olympic squad

“I wouldn’t change my process for anything,” she told Just Women’s Sports earlier this week as she prepared to join the national team at training camp in Phoenix. “I’m super grateful for it, it has definitely prepared me. It’s a testament to my work ethic, and me just really being persistent about what it is that I want.”

A proud product of North Philadelphia, Copper has always been big on manifesting, speaking her intentions confidently into the universe and never shying away from  ambitions no matter how far-fetched they sounded.

“It’s important to set goals, manifest those things, talk about it,” she said. “Because the more you speak it, you speak it into existence.” 

She also displays those goals on her refrigerator at home, forcing herself to keep them front of mind every day. The day she was named to the Olympic roster, ESPN’s Holly Rowe posted one of these visual reminders to social media: A 2021 photo showing Copper wearing a Team USA t-shirt over her Chicago Sky warmups, smiling at the camera while holding up the homemade gold medal slung around her neck.

“Kahleah Copper put out [the] photo on the left in Aug. 2021 and manifested that she WOULD be an Olympian,” Rowe’s caption read. “Today she made team USA. Dreams to reality.” 

The 2024 Paris Games will mark Copper’s Olympic debut. (Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images)

Copper turns her focus to Team USA

With one dream realized, Copper is aware that the job isn’t finished, as USA women’s basketball is aiming to win a historic eighth-straight Olympic gold medal in Paris this summer. That path doesn’t technically begin with All-Star Weekend — where Team USA will take on Team WNBA in a crucial tune-up game — but the trial run could make a difference when the team touches down in Europe next week.

“It’s serious, because other countries, they spend a lot of time together, so their chemistry is great,” Copper said of her Olympic competition. “We don’t get that, we don’t have that much time together. Just putting all the great players together is not enough. It’s gonna take a lot more than that.”

With a laugh, Copper acknowledged that Team USA’s task at hand could lightly dampen the occasionally raucous All-Star festivities (“Balance!” was an oft-repeated word). But it’s a cost she and her national team colleagues are more than willing to pay if it helps them come out on top in Paris. 

Of course, Copper — along with club teammates Diana Taurasi and Brittney Griner — will be enjoying home-court advantage when the All-Star Game tips off inside Phoenix’s Footprint Center on Saturday, a factor that might put them slightly more at ease. 

WNBA players kahleah copper and candace parker celebrating winning the 2021 championship with the chicago sky
Copper won a WNBA Championship in 2021 alongside one of her idols, Candace Parker. (Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

A “damn near perfect” new WNBA team

Copper made the move to the Mercury just this season after establishing herself as a respected star in Chicago. What she joined was a work in progress, one of a number of key 2024 signings under first-time head coach Nate Tibbetts. Having played for the Sky since 2017, Copper wasn’t exactly sure what to expect of the transition. But any positive manifestations she put out about her new team seemed to have done the trick.

“I said I would never go to the West Coast, I could never go that far from home,” she said. “But I didn’t know that this organization was what it was: Super professional, really taking care of everything. It’s damn near perfect.”

Copper herself has been damn near perfect, shooting 45% from the field while leading sixth-place Phoenix to a 13-12 record on the season. She’s also averaging a career-high 23.2 points per game, second highest in the league behind soon-to-be six-time WNBA All-Star A’ja Wilson’s 27.2 points per game. It’s not lost on Copper that she’s playing in front of packed houses, with the Mercury accounting for some of the W’s biggest crowds throughout its 28-year run. 

“Here in Phoenix, our fans are amazing,” Copper said. “They show up every single night.”

Phoenix Mercury player Kahleah Copper poses on the court before the 2023 WNBA All-Star Game
Copper will play in her fourth consecutive All-Star Game on Saturday. (Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)

Copper’s All-Star home-court advantage

All-Star Weekend presents Copper even more opportunities to connect with her new city, including by making an appearance at American Express’s interactive fan experience at WNBA Live 2024. As part of the activation, Copper recorded a few short stories about growing up a basketball fan, describing the posters of Candace Parker, Seimone Augustus, and Ivory Latta she had as a child, and how she dreamed of joining her idols as a professional basketball player. 

The Rutgers grad said she was excited about connecting with Phoenix fans on their level, rooting herself in a shared love of the sport even as she moves from watching the WNBA on TV to becoming one of its brightest stars. The message is clear: If you want something bad enough, and you work for it hard enough, just about anything is possible.

But for all of Copper’s personal manifestations, she’s never lost sight of the most important thing: winning. And she won’t stop grinding until she’s posing for the cameras in Paris, holding up a real Olympic gold medal.

“When winning comes, the other stuff will come,” she said. “The individual sh*t will come.”



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