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Archives for April 2025

Girls Flag Football on Path to be IHSAA Sanctioned Sport

April 30, 2025 by Tara S

Kyle Neddenriep Indianapolis Star

INDIANAPOLIS — Since the age of 7, Ava Cousin always considered herself a basketball player. She probably always will. But last fall, at the urging of teammate Wilma Gardner and assistant coach Destiny Starks, she decided to try a new sport last fall:

Flag football.

“I didn’t think I would be very good,” Cousin said.

She was wrong. She learned the wide receiver routes and football lingo, mostly from her father, Patrick, and Lawrence North girls flag football coach Donny Mimms. Almost instantly, Cousin recognized the similarities from her familiar confines on the basketball court to the football field.

“I was actually a really good defensive player in basketball, so I was used to reading what the offensive player was doing coming down the court,” Cousin said. “I think that translated for me to be able to read the defense (as a receiver) in football.”NFL DRAFT GRADES: Recap all NFL Draft picks, grades and analysis for all 32 teams.

Lawrence North, in its inaugural flag football season, went 5-1 and won the Metropolitan Interscholastic Conference championship. It was a life-changing experience in multiple ways for Cousin, who attended a talent camp at the University of St. Francis in Fort Wayne and was offered a scholarship. St. Francis is the first Indiana college to offer women’s flag football and will begin play in the spring of 2026.

“We’ve been preaching about (flag football) opening doors for girls and them taking a chance on themselves,” Mimms said. “Now we have three girls signed to go to St. Francis to play flag football. Two of the girls were on the bench on the basketball team and weren’t sure what they were going to do next. To me, it’s just about having confidence in your school, your school climate and getting this opportunity to your girls. You don’t know what that opportunity is going to be.”

Girls flag football is up for vote on Monday at the Indiana High School Athletic Association board of directors meeting to officially become an “emerging” sport, as girls wrestling and boys volleyball were recently before becoming recognized IHSAA sports in 2024-25. Girls lacrosse, a spring sport, was voted through as an emerging sport in August, starting in 2025-2026.

There is a lot of momentum, support and financial backing behind girls flag football nationwide, particularly in NFL markets. Locally, the Colts made a $1 million investment from the Irsay family to help support and sustain a goal of 100 teams playing girls flag football in the fall of 2025. In its “Road to 100” initiative, the Colts will invest up to $10,000 per school to help offset the costs associated with starting a program, including jerseys and a USA Football equipment kit.

The current number of schools participating is 59 … and climbing. The standard to become a sanctioned sport is 100 schools. The sport appears to be on a track to get there after eight schools participated in an initial pilot league in 2023, followed by 27 schools participating last fall.

“The ultimate goal is to be sanctioned as a varsity sport,” said Andy Matis, the senior manager of football development for the Colts. “We’re still continuing to recruit every single day and we’ve seen a lot of growth in Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, South Bend and the northwest part of the state.”

Indiana’s growth in girls flag football follows a nationwide trend. According to numbers provided by the National Federation of State High School Associations from August, participation doubled (20,875 to 42,955) in the sport from 2022-23 to 2023-24. There are already 15 states that have fully sanctioned girls flag football, including Washington just last week. The International Olympic Committee announced in 2023 women’s and men’s flag football would debut as part of the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

At schools like Ben Davis and Warren Central, interest level is high. The maximum roster size is 25 players, but both schools could support junior varsity teams if there were enough opponents to play.

“You have to keep in mind what is best for the kids,” Ben Davis athletic director Heather McGowan said. “For us, there are a lot of kids who have never played a sport before. Whether they got cut in middle school for soccer or volleyball or basketball. Now there are new opportunities for kids who want to play and maybe just not talented enough to make another sport. Now, here is a brand-new opportunity for them to come in and learn together at the same pace.”

Growing the sport

Of the 32 Class 6A football programs in the state, 14 are committed to having girls flag football programs. There are another seven in 5A and 18 in 4A. There are just nine, so far, in Class 3A and lower. But 11 schools have committed that don’t even have a football program.

Laschelle Hatcher, the girls flag football coach at Ben Davis, said the opportunity to come in on the ground floor of something new and unique has been appealing for her players.

“I’ve had some girls come in and say they like coming into this because it gives them a chance to be part of a sport but also aren’t intimidated because the sport has been around for so long,” Hatcher said. “It gives them an even platform to start out at the same time and then grow with it.”

Among the larger schools in Central Indiana to start teams are Ben Davis, Cathedral, Lawernce Central, Lawrence North, North Central, Pike, Tech and Warren Central. The advantage for larger schools is more available practice space. But Mimms said it does not even take a full football field — or even half a football field — to get in a practice.

“I notice and recognize the fears, but I think you can work to overcome those barriers,” said Mimms, who added eight of the 25 players on his roster had never played another sport. “I think once (Lawrence North coach Pat Mallory) saw the momentum we had he’d say, ‘We’re going to watch film for an hour if you want the field first.’ But we’d practice on the softball field. That was our normal spot. I think any school worried about facilities, you just have get along and be creative. Every program should want another program at their school to be successful. If you want to do it, you figure out a way.”

In addition to facilities, some athletic directors have voiced concerns about taking away athletes from another sport. The fall sports slate for girls already includes golf, cross-country, soccer, volleyball and Unified flag football.

“A lot of the concerns we’ve heard are either facilities or the timing in the fall, especially from smaller schools not wanting to pull girls from other sports,” Matis said. “Especially with the absence of a state title. Our biggest growth is the bigger cities in the state. Where we’re hitting our biggest roadblock is in the rural parts of the state because of the travel for them to find seven games.”

For the upcoming fall, there is a postseason tournament planned. Teams will be required to play a seven-game regular season to be eligible for the tournament, though they can still participate in the season even if they do not meet that minimum. Teams in the MIC plan to play the same opponent in tackle and flag within the same week. There are also opportunities in flag football for multi-game events in the same day.

Ben Davis, one of the original programs to participate in a jamboree the Colts hosted in December of 2022 and part of the first eight-team league in 2023, was the first opponent for the start-up Lawrence North program last fall. Mimms had his team ready. Ben Davis scored in the final minute, winning 20-16.

“I told my girls, ‘All that stuff that makes you mad during the day, bring that out here,’” Mimms said. “I don’t think (Ben Davis) thought we’d be prepared like we were. But it was a great game all the way through. They were begging me to play them again.”

Ben Davis got upset in the MIC tournament and that rematch did not happen. But Hatcher said she has learned a lot from watching Mimms infuse the Lawrence North program with a competitive edge. He was aggressive about adding other games and finding extra practice time. There are no requirements for the number of practices, though the Colts are recommending between one and four times a week.

“He’s done a phenomenal job,” Hatcher said of Mimms. “His competitiveness is bringing it out in other coaches as well, not just the girls. I would like to learn from him and plan to take it and use it against him.”

‘I learned something new every day’

Abrielle Alexander, like Cousin, was a basketball player first. She also played goalkeeper in soccer. The Lawrence North junior had no experience with football other than watching games on NFL Sundays with the family.

Coming out for the team opened a new world for Alexander, who also played receiver for the Wildcats.

“I always thought receivers ran long routes,” Alexander said. “Then I learned you can take short routes and run. It was like, ‘Nice, I might be tired but I can still run a short route and get long yards off of that.’ I learned something new every day. We learned from each other, learn from our mistakes and more about each other.”

Mimms believes as the sport continues to grow and trickles down into the younger age groups, schools that offer girls flag football will have an advantage in attracting multi-sport athletes.

“If a girl has been playing flag football growing up or has an interest and your school doesn’t offer flag football and another school does, you are going to lose out,” Mimms said. “Some of these schools aren’t looking at the entire picture or planning for the future.”

IHSAA commissioner Paul Neidig said at the athletic directors meeting last week at Plainfield there are no emerging sports on the horizon after girls lacrosse and flag football. He said he understands the concerns over finances, facilities and administrative oversight to take on new sports. But he believes the worry over spreading athletes too thin is unfounded.

“The concern is a student may drop playing soccer to go play girls flag football,” Neidig said. “(The schools’) experience is that has not been the case. I think the whole thing with boys volleyball is we’ve seen a whole new group of kids participate and we’ve certainly seen that in (girls) wrestling. It just opens up additional opportunities.”

For Cousin, Alexander and others, doors opened that they did not even know existed before last fall.

“It is only going to get better the more teams there are,” Alexander said. “The whole experience is really fun. Our team is like a family and we’re like sisters.

Filed Under: Flag Football, Youth Sports

Portland Team Owners Break Ground on First-Ever NWSL-WNBA Training Center

April 30, 2025 by Tara S

RAJ Sports, owners of the NWSL’s Portland Thorns and Portland’s incoming 2026 WNBA expansion franchise, broke ground on their historic dual-sport training center on Wednesday, as the 12-acre $150 million facility begins to take shape.

The performance center will support both Portland squads, becoming the first-ever training complex to house a professional women’s soccer club and a pro women’s basketball team under singular ownership.

Led by Lisa Bhathal Merage as well as her brother, Alex Bhathal, RAJ Sports is the sports investment arm of the Bhathal family, who shifted into team ownership on the heels of their longtime family swimwear business.

Bhathal Merage, in particular, is taking charge in ensuring the new facility is pushing the needle for women’s sports.

“We don’t look at our investments as philanthropy at all,” said Bhathal Merage. “It’s about moving things forward.”

“I’ve been involved in hand selecting every finish, carpet, tile to make it through the female lens of how we interact, how we look at things, what we want to see,” she explained.

“I think this performance center will be changing the dynamic for women’s sports for generations to come,” added Bhathal Merage. “Our view is to collaborate, involve the community and really lift up everybody by that collaboration.”

The Bhathal family are also eager to reveal their incoming WNBA team’s name, telling reporters that they’ve “literally compiled every single comment from every single person into a massive spreadsheet and rank them in order of how popular they were.”

“We’re waiting for final league approval,” said Bhathal Merage. “Hopefully within the next two, maximum three months, we’ll be able to unveil everything.”

Filed Under: Women's Basketball, Women's Hockey, Women's Sports

Stanford Breaks NCAA Softball Attendance Record with ‘Big Swing’

April 22, 2025 by Tara S

Dee Lab | Just Womens Sports

Stanford shattered the NCAA softball attendance record this weekend, welcoming 13,207 fans inside the university’s football stadium for Saturday’s “Big Swing”  game against Cal.

In the most-attended non-football contest in Stanford Athletics’ history, the Cardinal softball crowd surpassed the sport’s previous attendance record of 12,566, set on the first day of the 2024 Women’s College World Series (WCWS) in Oklahoma City.

The history-making game also blew past the NCAA softball regular-season record of 9,259 fans, a feat reached less than two weeks ago when reigning champions Oklahoma defeated local rivals Oklahoma State on April 9th.

“It was kind of like a mini College World Series experience,” Stanford junior outfielder Kyra Chan said after the game.

Despite dropping the record-breaking matchup 10-8 to their new ACC rivals, No. 16 Stanford ultimately secured the three-game series against the Golden Bears with wins on Thursday and Friday.

Friday’s 9-3 victory was particularly impactful, clinching the Cardinal a spot in their first-ever ACC championship tournament next month — the first postseason stop as Stanford hunts a third-straight appearance in the WCWS semifinals.

Nebraska volleyball lines up on the court for the August 2023 Volleyball Day in the university's football stadium.
Nebraska volleyball broke the overall US women’s sports attendance record in 2023. (Steven Branscombe/Getty Images)

Stanford softball fuels argument for larger women’s sports venues

Softball isn’t the only sport leading the recent surge in record-breaking NCAA women’s sports crowds.

After shifting a volleyball match into its football stadium in August 2023, Nebraska welcomed not just the sport’s biggest crowd, but the largest to ever attend any women’s sporting event in the US.

Shortly thereafter, Iowa’s “Crossover at Kinnick” blasted through the NCAA women’s basketball attendance mark by moving an exhibition game featuring the Caitlin Clark-led Hawkeyes into the university’s football venue.

Though the move to massive football stadiums was intentional to snag both Nebraska’s and Iowa’s respective records, Stanford’s venue shift was not initially an attendance-hunting move.

The Cardinal’s entire 2025 softball season is being played on the gridiron as the team’s new $50 million stadium and state-of-the-art training facility is under construction.

Taking advantage of that added capacity was a no-brainer, with Stanford specifically branding and marketing their rivalry “Big Swing” game to capitalize on their temporary digs — and to continue making the overall case for expanding women’s sports’ venues.

“I think that you see a consistent theme that there aren’t big enough venues for women’s sports to be able to draw the fans that they can draw,” Stanford softball head coach Jessica Allister pointed out.

“Hopefully, a lot of people who showed up to Stanford for the first time to watch a softball game will come back and see us in our beautiful stadium.”

Filed Under: Softball

Oklahoma Wins 2025 NCAA Gymnastics Championship Title

April 22, 2025 by Tara S

No. 2-seed Oklahoma won their third NCAA gymnastics championship in four years on Saturday, topping fellow finalists No. 4 Utah, No. 5 UCLA, and No. 7 Missouri with an overall score of 198.0125.

With seven titles since 2014, Oklahoma regains its reputation as the sport’s current dynasty, finishing atop the podium after falling short of a three-peat last year.

“Our theme wasn’t redemption this year at all,” Oklahoma head coach K.J. Kindler told reporters after Saturday’s victory.

“Does it make it sweet? Yes, but this team was capable of this last year. We just failed. And people fail all the time. They fail every day. And we talk about [it] all the time that the glory is in getting back up again.”https://www.instagram.com/p/DIpO489TFxE/embed/captioned/?cr=1&v=14&wp=1080&rd=https%3A%2F%2Fjustwomenssports.com&rp=%2Freads%2Fusa-hockey-wins-2025-iihf-world-championship-in-overtime-clash-with-canada-results%2F#%7B%22ci%22%3A1%2C%22os%22%3A371.19999999552965%2C%22ls%22%3A205.79999999701977%2C%22le%22%3A205.79999999701977%7D

Freedom allowed Oklahoma to reclaim NCAA gymnastics crown

Last year, the then-defending champion Sooners stumbled in a shocking loss in the national semifinals, a fate the 2024 champion LSU squad similarly suffered last Thursday, when the top-seeded Tigers failed to advance to the final meet of 2025.

Between overcoming the semifinals hurdles themselves and seeing LSU ousted — arguably Oklahoma’s biggest competition entering the weekend — the Sooners were able to breathe easier and enjoy their last competition of the season.

“After advancing, and we got to today, we were free,” said senior Audrey Davis. “We had no weight on our shoulders. We were free to do our best gymnastics.”

That freedom had the Sooners leading the charge, finishing their first rotation on beam tied with eventual runners-up UCLA before taking full control of the meet — Oklahoma grabbed a second-rotation lead on the floor and never relinquished it.

As for the rest of the field, Missouri earned a program-record third-place finish in their first-ever NCAA final, while nine-time champions Utah closed their season in fourth.

For Oklahoma senior Jordan Bowers, the final weekend of her collegiate career was one for the books.

In addition to the team title, Bowers won the individual all-around competition during Thursday’s semifinals — a day that also crowned LSU’s Kailin Chio (vault), Missouri’s Helen Hu (beam), and UCLA’s Jordan Chiles (uneven bars) and Brooklyn Moors (floor) as national apparatus champions.

“Just truly a fairytale ending,” Bowers said on the ABC broadcast. “I’m so freaking proud of this team, and I’m so proud to be a Sooner.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized

USA Hockey Wins 2025 IIHF World Championship in Overtime Clash

April 22, 2025 by Tara S

Claire Watkins | Just Women’s Sports

The USA skated to victory on Sunday, taking down archrival Canada in a 4-3 overtime thriller to earn the team’s 11th IIHF Women’s World Championship title.

The US is now closing in on Canada’s record 13 World Championship wins, setting the tone in the run-up to next year’s Winter Olympics as North America’s PWHL showcased its growing influence on the international stage.

After Canada equalized the second-period goals from US defender Caroline Harvey and forward Abbey Murphy — the potential No. 1 pick in June’s 2025 PWHL Draft — the game’s third period saw Team USA lose starting goaltender Aerin Frankel to injury.

Backup goalie and IIHF World Championship debutant Gwyneth Philips stepped in, seeing the USA to a back-and-forth 3-3 tie at the end of regulation.

Philips’s 17 saves — including 10 in overtime — allowed US forward and current Penn State junior Tessa Janecke to play hero, with the 20-year-old capitalizing on a turnover by tapping in a golden goal with three minutes left in the first overtime period.

“Just shows how strong we are as a group and how much we can persevere through anything,” Janecke said afterwards. “I wouldn’t want to do it with any other group.”

The tournament itself also proved to be a success, setting a new IIHF Women’s World Championship attendance record as 122,331 total fans took in the games in Czechia.

“I think this is a watershed moment for women’s hockey, and it’s really exciting to be a part of,” said US captain Hilary Knight after earning her 10th Worlds gold medal.

In a shifting hockey landscape, the USA-Canada rivalry is only becoming more intense — and the looming 2026 Olympics will provide yet another chance to steal the sport’s global spotlight.

Filed Under: Hockey, Women's Hockey

Ex-Marlins GM excited to bring MLB experience to women’s softball league

April 16, 2025 by Tara S

By Erin Achenbach | ClutchPoints

Former Miami Marlins general manager Kim Ng has been named the first commissioner of the Athletes Unlimited Softball League, the league announced Wednesday, marking another milestone in her trailblazing career and an important moment in the growth of professional women’s sports.

Ng, who served as the Marlins’ GM from 2020 to 2023, brings more than 30 years of experience in Major League Baseball to the role. A longtime advocate for women’s sports, she called the opportunity both personal and historic.

“I love this sport,” Ng said, as reported by Jeff Passan of ESPN. “From middle school on, I played softball, played in college … it’s been a big part of our lives. When you talk about this, I think it’s part of a movement.”

The AUSL is preparing for its inaugural tour-based season, a 24-game summer slate across 10 cities beginning June 7. The tour includes stops in Rosemont, Illinois, and Wichita, Kansas — where the most games will be held — and will conclude with a championship series in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The league intends to transition to six permanent teams in 2025.

Ng previously advised AUSL before accepting the full-time role. She said that her MLB background helped prepare her to lead a league, not just manage a team.

“When I hear the word commissioner, it just means leadership,” she said. “And I think being at Major League Baseball really helped me to understand the commissioner’s office and the services that they provide. It’s not just to understand what the clubs need, but you have to lead as well.”

AUSL’s structure is unique, with the entire league owned by one group and an emphasis on player input. Ng said there is a focus on stability before growth and the league is aiming to use social media and college outreach — like the upcoming “AUSL College Draft Show” on ESPNU — to boost its visibility.

Jon Patricof, Athletes Unlimited co-founder, credited Ng with unifying college and professional circles.

“Kim sets the bar … She has helped bring (key figures) into the league and into the sport. That’s a major differentiator.”

Filed Under: Softball

Alabama gymanstics Rachel Rybicki wins top academic honor, NCAA Elite 90 award

April 16, 2025 by Tara S

Maxwell Donaldson | Gadsden Times

Alabama gymanstics Rachel Rybicki brought home a pretigious academic honor on Tuesday.

Rybicki won the Elite 90 award for NCAA Division I women’s gymnastics, going to the top student-athlete academically at each of the NCAA’s 90 national championships. The award was given during an award banquet on Tuesday as Rybicki had the top GPA of all gymnasts at the NCAA Championship in Fort Worth, Texas.

Rybicki becomes the fifth Alabama gymanst to win the award but the first since Lauren Beers won three straight from 2014-16. She holds a 4.00 GPA as she is double majoring in economics and finance, with a minor in spanish.

“Rachel always brings a fierce commitment to excellence to everything she does and has truly established herself as a difference maker within our program. Her positivity is contagious, and she truly invests in others while taking exceptional ownership in every aspect of her development. We couldn’t be more proud of Rachel for earning the Elite 90 award, as this is a true reflection of who she is both on the floor and in the classroom,” head coach Ashley Johnston said.

Rybicki has earned two Scholastic All-American honors and been a member of the SEC Academic Honor Roll twice. She earned a spot on the 2025 SEC Gymnastics Community Service Team and will intern with Goldman Sachs over the summer.Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.REGIONAL FINALS: Alabama gymnastics advances to NCAA Championships with season high score, Florida advances

Rybicki has a season best score of 9.9 on beam and 9.925 on floor as she helped the Crimson Tide to their 40th national championship appearance.

The Crimson Tide start the championships on Thursday at 3:30 p.m. on ESPN2 with Oklahoma, Missouri and Florida in the semifinals, with the top two scores advancing to the finals.

Filed Under: Gymnastics

WNBA draft 2025: Wings, Sun, Mystics score highest grades

April 16, 2025 by Tara S

Michael Voepel | ESPN

Having the top pick in Monday’s WNBA draft virtually guaranteed the Dallas Wings an “A” in ESPN’s draft grades. And then the Wings did even better.

As expected, they selected UConn guard Paige Bueckers at No. 1. Dallas and then went guard-heavy on three of its four other picks, and at least a couple have a solid chance to make the roster.

Two teams in rebuilding mode — the Washington Mystics and Connecticut Sun — also had strong drafts. The league’s newest team, the expansion Golden State Valkyries, didn’t grade as well (their expansion draft also raised eyebrows). But there’s always a chance for teams to prove these grades wrong — sometimes for better, sometimes for worse.

The Phoenix Mercury had no picks Monday, and the defending champion New York Liberty had just one — the final selection — so there’s no grade for either franchise. But here are our initial impressions of the 2025 draft for the other 11 franchises.

Jump to: ATL | CHI | CON | DAL | GS | IND | LV | LA | MIN | SEA | WAS

Dallas Wings: A+

1: Paige Bueckers, UConn Huskies, PG
12: Aziaha James, NC State Wolfpack, SG
14: Madison Scott, Ole Miss Rebels, SG
27: JJ Quinerly, West Virginia Mountaineers, SG
31: Aaronette Vonleh, Baylor Bears, C

It’s a new era for Dallas, which is under new leadership after missing the playoffs last season (the Wings reached the 2023 semifinals). New Wings GM Curt Miller is a longtime WNBA coach and general manager who excelled with defense in his time leading the Sun — and the picks in his first draft with Dallas reflect that.

Admittedly, it will be hard for James, Scott and Quinerly to all make this roster. But they are all good players who will make camp very competitive.

With veteran Arike Ogunbowale, Bueckers and James on the roster, the Wings will be hard to guard. And Dallas’ perimeter defense could be outstanding. Expect this team to play very fast and take advantage of all of Bueckers’ many talents.

Bueckers feels ‘overwhelming sense of gratitude’ after being drafted by Wings

Newly drafted Wings star Paige Bueckers expresses her emotions after being the first pick of the WNBA draft.


Connecticut Sun: A

7: Aneesah Morrow, LSU Tigers, PF
8: Saniya Rivers, NC State Wolfpack, SF
25: Rayah Marshall, USC Trojans, PF

The Sun had to be thrilled that Morrow was still available at No. 7. Like her former LSU teammate Angel Reese (last year’s No. 7 pick) was for Chicago, Morrow could be a rebounding star right away.

After the Sun lost longtime face of the franchise Alyssa Thomas — known as “The Engine” — to Phoenix through free agency, now Morrow comes in as a new motor.

Rivers is long, quick and versatile, a player who filled up box scores for the Wolfpack. Marshall is strong and dependable as an interior defender and rebounder, with some untapped offensive potential, too.

Connecticut Sun select Aneesah Morrow 7th overall

The Connecticut Sun select Aneesah Morrow from LSU with the seventh pick of the WNBA draft.


Washington Mystics: A-

3: Sonia Citron, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, SG
4: Kiki Iriafen, USC Trojans, PF
6: Georgia Amoore, Kentucky Wildcats, PG
23: Lucy Olsen, Iowa Hawkeyes, SG
32: Zaay Green, Alabama Crimson Tide, PG

The top three here, of course, are the most likely to make an impact for a new-look Mystics franchise. Citron is an excellent defender and dependable scorer who brings Notre Dame’s famed “Guard U” prowess to the Mystics. Iriafen turned herself into a lottery pick with her junior and senior seasons. Amoore is small, but she is an offensive force and will do whatever is needed of her on defense.

But Washington’s depth impressed, too: Olsen excited Big Ten fans with her scoring ability in her one season at Iowa, and Green also had a big impact in her one season at Alabama.

Mystics take Sonia Citron with the 3rd pick

The Washington Mystics select Notre Dame star Sonia Citron with the third pick in the WNBA draft.


Indiana Fever: B+

19: Makayla Timpson, Florida State Seminoles, PF
20: Bree Hall, South Carolina Gamecocks, SG
33: Yvonne Ejim, Gonzaga Bulldogs, PF

The Fever won the draft the past two years with two No. 1 picks who won Rookie of the Year in Aliyah Boston and Caitlin Clark. After making the playoffs for the first time since 2016, the Fever didn’t have a first-round pick in this draft but made the most of what they had.

Timpson just might be the steal of the second round; she has averaged a double-double the past two seasons for the Seminoles and could be another good target for Clark’s passes. Hall is a lockdown defender and former teammate of Boston’s at South Carolina.


Seattle Storm: B+

2: Dominique Malonga, France, C
26: Serena Sundell, Kansas State Wildcats, PG
29: Madison Conner, TCU Horned Frogs, SG
34: Jordan Hobbs, Michigan Wolverines, PG

We are ready to be wowed by Malonga, who could be one of the next great post players in the WNBA despite still being a teenager. She will have some excellent mentoring from players such as veteran All-Star Nneka Ogwumike with Seattle.

Malonga alone would earn a good grade for the Storm, but Sundell, a third-round pick, has a shot to make the team. She loved passing to Ayoka Lee at K-State, and now she could have another 6-foot-6 target in Malonga, along with Ogwumike and 6-foot-4 Ezi Magbegor.

Seattle Storm select Dominique Malonga 2nd overall

The Seattle Storm select Dominique Malonga from France with the second pick of the WNBA draft.


Chicago Sky: B

10: Ajsa Sivka, Slovenia, PF
11: Hailey Van Lith, TCU Horned Frogs, PG
16: Maddy Westbeld, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, PF
22: Aicha Coulibaly, Texas A&M Aggies, SG

A lot of this grade depends on Sivka, a highly regarded teen who, like Malonga, doesn’t turn 20 until November. If she adapts well to the WNBA, the Sky could have a very good young post core, with Sivka alongside sophomores Angel Reese and Kamilla Cardoso.

Van Lith, who played one season at LSU with Reese, reached the Elite Eight five times as a college player; we will see if she continues that success in the pro game. Westbeld might have a chance to make the roster, too.

Hailey Van Lith thanks family after being drafted by Chicago

New Chicago Sky star Hailey Van Lith tells Holly Rowe how her family has impacted her work ethic.


Los Angeles Sparks: B-

9: Sarah Ashlee Barker, Alabama Crimson Tide, SG
21: Sania Feagin, South Carolina Gamecocks, PF
28: Liatu King, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, SF

Barker wasn’t this high on our draft board, but she had her career-best year as a senior, shooting 56% from 2-point range and 37.5% from behind the arc.

Looking back, though, Feagin might be the most impactful player the Sparks get in this draft. She came into her own this season for the Gamecocks and could just be scratching the surface of her ability.


Las Vegas Aces: B-

13: Aaliyah Nye, Alabama Crimson Tide, SG
35: Harmoni Turner, Harvard Crimson, SG

The Aces lost their first-round pick for league disciplinary reasons, but they made the most of these two selections, and at least one could make the roster. Nye could be a good fit for coach Becky Hammon’s offense — she made more than 100 3-pointers each of the past two seasons, shooting 41.7% behind the arc as a junior and 45.5% as a senior. Turner was one of the top scorers in the country (22.5 PPG) this season and led Harvard to the NCAA tournament.


Atlanta Dream: C

18: Te-Hina Paopao, South Carolina Gamecocks, SG
36: Taylor Thierry, Ohio State Buckeyes, SF

With picks this late, there’s no guarantee of getting someone who can make the team. But Paopao’s shooting ability might give her a chance. She wasn’t as sharp from 3-point range for South Carolina this season (37%) as she was in 2023-24 (46.8%), but we know what kind of shooter she can be.

Thierry was one of the Big Ten’s best defenders; even if she doesn’t make this roster, she could have a future in the WNBA.

Te-Hina Paopao is ready to bring Samoan culture to Atlanta

New Atlanta Dream star Te-Hina Paopao talks about bringing her Samoan heritage to the WNBA.


Minnesota Lynx: C

15: Anastasiia Kosu, Russia, SF
24: Dalayah Daniels, Washington Huskies, PF
37: Aubrey Griffin, UConn Huskies, SF

A big part of the reason the grade is middling for the Lynx is that they didn’t really need anything from this draft. They were an eyelash from winning the WNBA title last year and bring back all those key players. They traded their first-round pick (No. 11) to Chicago.

But the player to watch is Kosu, a promising youngster who could end up at some point making this draft look quite good for Minnesota.


Golden State Valkyries: C-

5: Juste Jocyte, Lithuania, SG
17: Shyanne Sellers, Maryland Terrapins, PG
30: Kaitlyn Chen, UConn Huskies, PG

Part of the difficulty with evaluating the Valkyries’ first draft is we really don’t know how their players will fit together since they have yet to play a game as a franchise.

Sellers dropped further than we expected; perhaps she makes an impact on this roster. As for the Valkyries’ first-round pick, we don’t want to underplay Jocyte’s potential; she is highly regarded among the young players from overseas. But the Valkyries seem to be counting on her to make an immediate impact, and it might take longer.

Filed Under: Women's Basketball

Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Names WNBA Trio to Class of 2025

April 9, 2025 by Tara S

The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame announced this year’s inductees on Saturday, with WNBA legends Sue Bird, Sylvia Fowles, and Maya Moore headlining a star-studded Class of 2025.

The Hall of Fame mandates a two-year post-retirement waiting period for eligibility, with both Bird and Fowles qualifying for the shortlist following their 2022 retirements from the WNBA.

Moore officially retired from the WNBA in early 2023, despite stepping away from professional basketball in 2018.

2025 Hall of Fame class highlights WNBA accolades

This year’s class is the first to ever feature three WNBA players, proving the iconic trio’s monumental contributions to the sport.

All three players won multiple Olympic gold medals with Team USA in addition to competing in at least three NCAA Final Fours, with UConn alums Bird and Moore counting two national championships among their accolades.

Moore is a four-time WNBA champion with the Minnesota Lynx, earning her last two titles with Fowles as her teammate, while Bird won four WNBA titles with the Seattle Storm.

Both Moore and Fowles have picked up WNBA MVP awards, while Bird retired as the league’s career assists leader.

How to attend the Hall of Fame’s 2025 Enshrinement Weekend

The Naismith Hall of Fame’s 2025 Enshrinement Weekend tips off on September 5th, with both weekend packages and single event tickets currently available for purchase online.

Filed Under: Women's Basketball

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