Two former Notre Dame players reach personal WNBA milestones

What an evening.

It seems like every night, a former Notre Dame player is turning heads in the WNBA. Friday was a night in which multiple players who went through the program shined.

[autotag]Kayla McBride[/autotag] hit a career-high eight 3-pointers, which accounted for all but one of her 25 points that led the Minnesota Lynx.  That’s one more than the seven Caitlin Clark hit in another game during the night to tie the WNBA rookie record.

Despite McBride’s big night, Kahleah Copper hit a last-second 3 of her own to put the Phoenix Mercury in front. McBride fired one last shot from beyond the arc but missed, and the Lynx lost, 81-80.

There was a happier outcome for [autotag]Jewell Loyd[/autotag], who scored her 5,000th career points en route to her own 25-point game in the Seattle Storm’s 78-65 victory over the Las Vegas Aces. Supporting Loyd was [autotag]Skylar Diggins-Smith[/autotag], who had 21 points and a game-high seven assists.

[autotag]Jackie Young[/autotag] made only one 3-pointer on 12 field-goal attempts for the Aces.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

WNBA refs across the league had a very bad night

Why have one ref controversy when you can have multiple in one night?

Another night in the W, another officiating controversy. And another and another.

Seriously, it seemed like whichever game you flipped to on Tuesday night, the referees were making themselves the dominant conversation on the broadcast.

The spotlight is definitely shining a bit brighter on the officials following Chennedy Carter’s hip check on Caitlin Clark that was only called a common foul in real time. While the league office later upgraded Carter’s foul to a flagrant 1, it still wasn’t the best look for the refs who actually called the game.

That helped set the stage for Tuesday night’s wildly inconsistent calls across the W.

Angel Reese ejected for waving her hand

When even your opponents feel a ref has gone too far, you know it’s a bad call. Shoutout to New York Liberty star Sabrina Ionescu for calling out the treatment of Chicago’s Angel Reese in the moment because it’s hard to see how this constitutes two technical fouls and an ejection.

According to the pool report, the refs assessed one tech for Reese uttering an expletive after disagreeing with a call. The second came moments later after she waved off the ref who assessed it.

Maj Forsberg was not the official who ejected Reese, for what it’s worth, but that doesn’t make the explanation any better. Players don’t have to like any given call by the official, they just have to abide by them. It seems like that’s what Reese was doing when she got ejected. And that would’ve dominated the night’s headlines, but not long after, the ref show continued in Seattle.

Kahleah Copper’s technical foul also draws an and-1

Yeah, so this was weird. The refs called Skylar Diggins-Smith for blocking on Kahleah Copper’s drive to the rim. Then they hit Copper with a tech for making excessive contact with Diggins-Smith.

Usually you see refs go with one or the other here. Not often you get both. But now we must ask again what the threshold is for a technical foul in the W. Because if drawing blood only gets a tech, but waving off an official gets you ejected, we have some questions.

But hold those thoughts because it gets worse.

Diana Taurasi’s turn to get a tech

Yeah, the refs were just handing techs out all over the place. Before we get to that, let’s take a look at Taurasi getting understandably heated after Phoenix was called for a turnover it didn’t commit.

Warning: NSFW language 

You may have seen that Taurasi later earned a tech and shouted some very unkind words at the refs. Did she get ejected like Reese? Nope. She got to stay on the bench.

 

We’re just asking for some consistency from the refs. Undoubtedly, officiating basketball games is a tough job that not many are running to sign up for, but we’ve got to do better than this.

As the WNBA continues to draw more eyes, these calls are only going to come under the microscope more often. The league — and its officials — need to prove they’re ready to meet the moment.

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Diana Taurasi and Skylar Diggins-Smith (probably) still have beef ahead of Mercury-Storm matchup

There’s a high probability (like nearly 100%) that Diana Taurasi gets a tech Tuesday.

Seattle Storm guard Skylar Diggins-Smith will face her former team, the Phoenix Mercury, on Tuesday night, and the matchup is guaranteed to be pure cinema. Diggins-Smith isn’t seemingly very high on her former organization, and that includes very outspoken veteran Diana Taurasi.

In case you missed it, things have been BAD between the Mercury and Skylar for a hot minute, and a lot of it has to do with Phoenix allegedly cutting her off from using training facilities while she was on maternity leave. It understandably did not sit well with her, and when she left to join Seattle in the offseason, she sent a subtle message to the team that they undervalued her.

Also, things are probably still pretty icy between Skylar and Diana Taurasi. Their interactions have gotten heated before, and when Diana was asked about Skylar potentially re-joining the Mercury after last season ended, she answered with “next question.”  Diana and the Mercury will meet Skylar for the first time this season on Tuesday, and the game could be the best of the night.

Fans are totally here for the spicy matchup and have already started dropping reactions. Here’s what they’re saying:

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Caitlin Clark seemingly getting fouled with no call fired up Fever coach Christie Sides to the point of a tech

The refs seemingly ignoring a Storm foul on Caitlin Clark got Fever coach Christine Sides fired up to the point of a tech.

In what was a pretty chippy Thursday night game between the Indiana Fever and Seattle Storm, Indiana coach Christie Sides earned a technical foul while defending her star rookie, Caitlin Clark.

Fieldhouse Files reporter Scott Agness noticed that a possible no-call on the Storm as Clark went in for a basket got Sides fired up on the sideline. Her passionate response to the perceived no-call earned her a technical foul, something Clark picked up earlier in the game.

Sides defending Clark in a moment like this will build trust and respect in the Fever locker room, as opposing players aren’t going to stop going hard at Clark during her first WNBA season.

While technical fouls are never ideal, standing up for your player when you feel like they’ve been wronged without proper response is more than fair.

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Caitlin Clark hit a stellar logo 3-pointer and then got a technical foul for an altercation with Victoria Vivians

Caitlin Clark picked up a tech after a logo 3-pointer for getting in an altercation with Victoria Vivians.

Indiana Fever rookie guard Caitlin Clark showed her competitive edge on Thursday night at home while getting a technical foul for getting into a scuffle with Seattle Storm guard Victoria Vivians.

After Clark hit a fantastic logo 3-pointer for Indiana, Clark and Vivians got into each other’s faces, made brief contact and exchanged some heated words with each other.

Clark’s fellow Fever player Aliyah Boston quickly came over to hold her teammate back, and things settled once Clark and Vivians both picked up technical fouls for the altercation.

As Clark is undoubtedly going to draw some extra attention from opposing veterans in the WNBA, it sure looks like the Fever rookie isn’t afraid to speak her mind when she feels it necessary.

It’d just help Indiana in the future if she didn’t get a tech in the process.

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Sue Bird thinks by 2026 the WNBA could be ‘dramatically different’

The WNBA’s CBA is inching closer to the opt-out period and a new media rights’ deal is looming.

The WNBA is growing faster than ever, with two new franchises being announced within less than a year of each other. From rookie guard Caitlin Clark receiving a $28 million sponsorship deal from Nike to skyrocketing viewership to legends like Sue Bird becoming an owner in her beloved Seattle Storm, the stage is being set for a wild next few years for the league.

The WNBA’s CBA is inching closer to the opt-out period and a new media rights deal is looming. The WNBA and the Players Association each have the option, exercisable by providing written notice on or before Nov. 1, 2024, to terminate the CBA effective on Oct. 31, 2025, or, if later, on the day following the final playoff game of the 2025 season.

The WNBA currently earns around $60 million annually from its media rights deal, but a new deal could draw a much bigger amount. WNBA commissioner Kathy Engelbert believes the league could at least double the media rights fee.]

Bird weighed in on what a new media rights deal could mean.

“But once we see this media rights deal, assuming it’s going to be what we all think it’s going to be, you’re going to see things dramatically change in the WNBA,” Bird told The Associated Press. “It will be a whole new world. We have a hard salary cap somewhere in the $1.4 million range. But once the money gets interjected and maybe there’s a soft cap — now we’re talking. The media rights contract is up this year. The CBA has an opt-out next year — so by 2026, it could be dramatically different.”

As more money is infused into the league and the players, the bigger changes we will begin to see and those changes could be implemented into the new CBA. A few changes expected to be seen in a new iteration of the CBA include charter flights and a salary cap increase, which, in turn, will see higher salaries.

As with any growth, there will be growing pains, as we are now seeing with the investigation into the Las Vegas Aces players’ most recent sponsorship deal with the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. But growing pains don’t have to last a long time and the more flexible the owners and league are with the increased interest, the better it will be for the league, the players and the fans.

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Notre Dame alumni aplenty in Chicago Sky-Seattle Storm game

Will you watch if you’re able?

Notre Dame has one of the best women’s basketball programs in the country. As proof of that, eight players who have gone through the program currently are in the WNBA. The most number of those players who can be on the floor at the same time are five. We’ll see this happen Tuesday when the Chicago Sky host the Seattle Storm, both teams with .500 records.

[autotag]Marina Mabrey[/autotag], one of the top 3-point shooters in the WNBA who has made 12 of 34 shots from downtown for a .364 shooting percentage from there, leads the Sky with 19.3 points and 5.5 assists a game. [autotag]Jewell Loyd[/autotag], the league’s defending scoring champion, is second on the Storm with 19.5 points a game.

The Storm’s [autotag]Skylar Diggins-Smith[/autotag] is fifth in the league with 6.2 assists a game, which would tie a career high if the season ended today. Rounding out this group of former Irish players are the Sky’s [autotag]Lindsay Allen[/autotag] and [autotag]Brianna Turner[/autotag], and we’ll see if they can play a role in this game.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Watch: Seahawks players fire up the crowd for Seattle Storm

Watch: Seahawks players fire up the crowd for Seattle Storm

To say the City of Seattle and the Pacific Northwest as a whole have been pining for professional basketball is an understatement. Ever since the Sonics were stol…. er, I mean… relocated, the itch for basketball for one of the nation’s best fanbases has yet to be fully scratched.

Thankfully, there is the Seattle Storm, the region’s WNBA team. Although the Storm have fallen on lean times recently, they have consistently been one of the league’s best, having won four titles since 2004.

On Wednesday night, hype for the Storm – and the WNBA as a whole – was palpable in the Emerald City, all thanks to one woman: Caitlin Clark.

The Iowa phenom made her first trip to Seattle as a member of the Indiana Fever, and she was welcomed by a raucous, record-setting crowd of 18,383 fans. Among them were members of the Seahawks, who were tossing t-shirts into the crowd.

The Storm ultimately prevailed, winning 85-83 behind Jewell Loyd’s 32 points to improve to 2-3 on the young season. Clark played well, leading Indiana with 21 points, but ultimately the Fever fell to 0-5 and remain in last place.

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Nika Muhl wore a clever visa-approved shirt ahead of her WNBA debut and fans loved it

10/10 shirt. No notes.

After visa issues delayed her, Nika Muhl finally made her long-awaited WNBA debut on Wednesday. People have been clamoring for Muhl to play — even Angel Reese chimed in — and it seems Nika heard the chatter. She walked into pre-game activities wearing a hilarious visa-approved shirt.

A few weeks back, Nika Muhl was unsure she would make the team. (In the WNBA, being drafted is no guarantee to make the roster.) But, UConn head coach Geno Auriemma assured her that she would in a heartfelt conversation.

Then, work visa issues caused Muhl to miss four games and delayed her WNBA debut. However, Nika was finally ready to go Wednesday night. To celebrate the occasion — and show off her fantastic sense of humor — Muhl arrived in a genius visa approval shirt.

Of course, fans loved her shirt and were over the moon about it. Here’s what they said:

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Liberty center Jonquel Jones sets WNBA record with latest performance

Jones reached 2,000 career points and 250 3-pointers with her latest performance on Monday.

On Monday, the New York Liberty defeated the Seattle Storm, 74-63, and center Jonquel Jones made WNBA history. Jones became the fastest player to reach 2,000 rebounds and 250 3-pointers (240 games), passing Lauren Jackson (254 games).

Jones is one of only eight players in WNBA history to reach those statistics. In the process, she also became the sixth-fastest player to reach 2,000 rebounds, and her final line for the night included 16 points, eight rebounds, and two blocks.

Jones was drafted No. 6 overall in the 2016 WNBA draft by Los Angeles and was later traded to Connecticut. Her accolades are numerous:

• WNBA Most Valuable Player (2021)
• WNBA Most Improved Player (2017)
• WNBA Sixth Woman of the Year (2018)
• All-WNBA first team (2021)
• All-WNBA second team (2017, 2019, 2022)
• All-WNBA Defensive Team (2019, 2021, 2022)
• WNBA All-Star (2017, 2019, 2021, 2022)
• One of 13 players with a 20-20 game (23 points, 21 rebounds; May 2021)

The Liberty’s next game is against the Chicago Sky on May 23 at 7 p.m. ET at Barclays Center.

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