Why Christie Sides and Noelle Quinn had a very tense courtside exchange after a Fever blowout win

At the end of a Storm-Fever matchup, things quickly got tense between Christie Sides and Noelle Quinn.

The Indiana Fever finally beat the Seattle Storm, and the matchup did not disappoint.

This was probably always going to be the case for the Fever. Seattle beat Indiana three straight times before Sunday, including twice by double digits. So, you have to think, *at some point*, Indiana would finally get its life together and fight back. It happened dramatically with a strange Caitlin Clark technical foul, a career day from Lexie Hull and an absolutely wild fourth quarter that produced a lead that the Storm couldn’t overcome.

Once Seattle’s comeback was out of reach, this seemingly could have been where Fever head coach Christie Sides pulled her starters as Storm head coach Noelle Quinn pulled hers. But Sides did not, and there was a very awkward exchange with Quinn (and even Skylar Diggins-Smith) during the end of the game.

Quinn seemingly gave Sides an earful multiple times before eventually walking away. Postgame, she downplayed the exchange, saying that she and Sides had a “spirited conversation about gamesmanship.”

Reading the room, this is probably less about Sides playing her starters (which she was fully entitled to) and more about Seattle dropping a heartbreaker to the Atlanta Dream on Friday and then having another tough loss on Sunday.

It’s certainly understandable why Quinn would feel some way about it, considering the game was already a contested battle, and her team faltered down the stretch.

Either way, the exchange amounted to a nothing burger, and both sides moved on.

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Former UCLA legend Noelle Quinn featured in WNBA X post

Back to the past.

Former UCLA Bruins are all over the WNBA. This week, however, a former Bruin and current WNBA coach made some headlines. 

In a game against the Washington Mystics, former Bruins guard Noelle Quinn and the current Seattle Storm head coach turned some heads. In a video posted by the WNBA on X, Quinn has a loose ball bounce to her where she catches and shoots. Her shot elicits laughs from the commentators and crowd. 

Quinn being back in the news, however, is the perfect opportunity to revisit her career at UCLA. In four seasons from 2003-2007, Quinn averaged 17.1 points, 7.4 rebounds, and 4.2 assists per game, as well as a UCLA-record 35.6 minutes per game.

Moreover, Quinn had success in the WNBA beyond just college. Winning the WNBA title as both an associate coach and as a player for the Seattle Storm, the former fourth-overall pick has Seattle hoping for another title this season. 

Watch: Jewell Loyd learns she’s Western Conference Player of the Week

Congrats, Jewell!

Notre Dame alumnus [autotag]Jewell Loyd[/autotag] is having by far the best season of her WNBA career. She’s the league’s leading scorer, averaging 25.4 points a game, which is well above the career-best 17.9 she averaged in 2021.

Loyd scored a career-high 39 points to help the Seattle Storm beat [autotag]Arike Ogunbowale[/autotag] (41 points) and the Dallas Wings, 109-103, on June 17. This performance undoubtedly factored into her being named Western Conference Player of the Week, a honor that Storm coach Noelle Quinn was happy to announce:

Loyd previously won conference player of the week honors in June 2021. While she surely is happy to add to her trophy case, her focus most likely is on the changing her team’s fortunes. The Storm are 3-7, placing them 10th in the 12-team league. She will need some help if the Storm are to keep their seven-year playoff streak alive.

Even if the Storm don’t make the postseason, this will be a season for Loyd to remember. It will be awesome to see her continue to ascend to new heights.

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