Duke basketball alum Chelsea Gray overcome with emotions after reaching WNBA semifinals

Duke women’s basketball alum Chelsea Gray let out some emotion once she reached the WNBA semifinals despite a foot injury early in the year.

Former Duke women’s basketball star [autotag]Chelsea Gray[/autotag] advanced to the WNBA semifinals on Tuesday night when the Las Vegas Aces took down the Seattle Storm, and Gray made it visibly clear how important this postseason run is to her.

Gray was seen sharing emotional embraces after the 83-76 victory, emblematic of her trying season.

The three-time champion hurt her foot in last year’s WNBA Finals, an injury that kept her out of the first 12 games of this season. She didn’t see the court until mid-June and only played 26.0 minutes per game, her lowest total since her sophomore season in 2016.

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The former Blue Devil averaged 14.0 points and 8.0 assists in Vegas’s two games against the Storm, playing more than 30 minutes in both contests. The emotional victory comes weeks after she became the first Duke women’s basketball alum to win multiple Olympic gold medals with Team USA earlier this summer.

Gray and the Aces now face the top-seeded New York Liberty in a best-of-five series with a spot in the Finals on the line.

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The semifinal series begins on Saturday.

Former Duke basketball star Chelsea Gray advances to WNBA semifinals

Chelsea Gray moved one step closer to her fourth WNBA championship on Tuesday night when the Las Vegas Aces advanced to the second round.

Former Duke women’s basketball star [autotag]Chelsea Gray[/autotag] took a big step toward another WNBA championship on Tuesday night when the Las Vegas Aces beat the Seattle Storm 83-76.

The victory gave the Aces, who have won the previous two league titles, a 2-0 sweep in the best-of-three series to advance into the league semifinals.

Gray scored 12 points and dealt nine assists during Tuesday’s victory, a familiar stat line for the ‘Point Gawd’. She finished the first game of the series with 16 points and seven dimes.

While she recently won her second consecutive Olympic gold medal, becoming the first Duke women’s basketball alum to do so, 2024 has been a trying season for Gray. She injured her foot during last year’s WNBA Finals, missing the first 12 games of this season before finally returning to the court on June 19.

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Gray also won a WNBA championship with the Los Angeles Sparks in 2016, and she won Finals MVP honors in 2022 when Las Vegas started its dominant run.

The Aces face the New York Liberty, who finished with a league-best 32-8 record, in the second round. That best-of-five series begins on Saturday.