The Guru’s WNBA Report: Bueckers Leads Dallas Over Washington; Expansion Portland Keeps Connecticut Winless; Chicago’s Jackson Out for Season
By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsgurux
Week two of the 30th WNBA season got under way Monday night with a doubleheader delighting both home crowds as Dallas erupted with a 28-17 third quarter to beat Washington 92-69 in front of 6,251 at the College Park Center in suburban Arlington while expansion Portland edged Connecticut 83-82 before 12,010 in the Moda Center in Oregon leaving the visiting Sun (0-5) as the only winless squad in the 15-team league, the other three who played are now 2-2 while after Atlanta’s one-point loss to Las Vegas Sunday, no unbeaten squads remain.
Down in Texas, reigning rookie of the year Paige Bueckers scored 18 points with seven assists for the winning Wings, her former UConn teammate Azzi Fudd, the overall top pick in last month’s draft, off the bench had her best performance with 12 points in 24 minutes, shooting 6-for-9 with three assists and a pair of rebounds, and former Notre Dame standout Arike Ogunbowale scored 16 points.
Additionally, Jessica Shepard had 12 points and 16 boards, equaling the WNBA single game high for rebounds this season, and reserve and former Villanova standout Maddy Siegriest, the number three overall pick of the 2023 draft, shot 4-for-9 with a pair of makes from deep for 10 points.
Bueckers shot 4-of-5 from distance, as Dallas shared the ball well with 31 assists on 33 in building a lead that reached 25 points off a 52-14 run across the third and fourth quarters and also excelled defensively with 23 points off 18 turnovers.
Washington’s Shakira Austin scored 12 points and reserve Lauren Betts, who went fourth overall last month out of NCAA champion UCLA that saw a record six players selected, had 11 points and second-year pro Kiki Iriafen scored nine points with 10 points but sister all-rookie Sonia Citron was held to seven points.
Former Villanovan Lucy Olsen, whose senior year was at Iowa before drafted in 2025, off the bench was a perfect 3-for-3 and had eight points.
After the Wings’ last game, a loss, first-year coach Jose Fernandez out of a long stint at South Florida said there had been a lot of selfishness in the Dallas locker room.
Bueckers on the response said after Monday’s win, “It felt really good. It started when we set the tone off the jump, defensively, we held them to a nine-point first quarter and then after that we played unselfishly, we got out in transition.
“We had really good days of practice leading up to this game, really talking and communicating.”
“The offense hasn’t been the problem,” Fernandez said. “In the third and fourth quarter the ball was really moving. This game was won because how we defended, how we rebounded. It was won because of the commitment the last two days at practice and shootaround.”
Fudd said of her performance, “My goal was just to be aggressive when I got into the game and contribute any way I could, watch what the starters were doing and they started the game being aggressive, pushing the pace, so I wanted to do that.”
Fire Clip Sun
Portland’s Sarah Ashlee Barker, a reserve and second-year pro out of Alabama who came from Los Angeles in the expansion draft, and Bridget Carleton, a Canadian and seven-year pro who came the same way out of Minnesota, each collected 18 points, a career-high for Barker, while Sug Sutton, a former NCAA Texas star who last played in Washington, put the Fire in front 81-79 with 22.6 seconds left in regulation.
Sutton finished with 12 points and five assists.
The Sun, acquired in 2003 from Orlando and who have been sold and relocating next season in Houston reviving as the Comets who won the first four WNBA crowns (1997-200), failed to tie on their next two possessions.
Carleton was then fouled and made it a four-point lead with 9.7 ticks remaining on the clock.
Charlisse Leger-Walker, who went in the second round last month out of UCLA, scored from deep for the visitors, the Fire then committed an offensive foul, but Aneesah Morrow’s half-court heave was short.
Portland’s Emily Engstler added 15 points and Nyadiew Puoch scored 10 points.
Free-agent signee Brittney Griner with an eye to her native Texas next season topped Connecticut with 16 points, getting to one off 6,000 for her career, while Morrow, Hailey Van Lith and Aaliyah Edwards each scored 12 and Leger-Walker, a native New Zealander who also played at Washington State, scored 10 points.
Holding Portland to 13 points in the second quarter, the Sun shot 58% from the field while the home team was 3-of-13 from deep.
The game was tied 64-64 at the end of three quarters after the Sun’s Saniya Rivers went length-of-court to score from the line.
Foul shooting plagued the Sun, who shot 11-of-20 at the line and went deep on the early schedule last summer before being more competitive down the stretch.
Fire coach Alex Sarama, a former NBA assistant in Cleveland, said of picking Barker to fit his system, “It’s grit, it’s resilience. It’s being the hardest worker every single minute. And I think SA shows all of that and more.”
She described her style, “It’s just stepping up for your teammates, and just doing the little things. I’ve always been someone who enjoys doing the little things, enjoy rebounding, enjoys playing defense, and just the way whatever the team needs of me.”
Sutton started the game in place of French guard Carla Leite who twisted her right ankle in Portland’s first of two games hosting New York on May 12, a game Barker scored the winner ahead of the final buzzer.
‘The key thing that stood out was the perseverance,” Sarama said of Monday’s win. “It was messy, very scrappy at times. I always felt we had a chance to win that game knowing the trust we have in that group.”
Last summer Golden State in its first season set WNBA expansion records with a total game night sellout, number of wins, and making the playoffs.
This season both Portland and Toronto have picked up a pair of wins 11 days into the action.
Jackson Lost for Season in Chicago
Rickea Jackson, who went down in the second quarter of Sunday’s game in Minnesota, an injury that drew Sky free-agent and Saint Joseph’s alum Natasha Cloud criticizing officials for losing control of the game, has been lost for the season with an ACL, the team announced Tuesday morning.
Looking Ahead
A single game Tuesday has Phoenix hosting Toronto at 10 p.m. on League Pass while on Wednesday USA airs Indiana hosting Portland at 7 p.m. and Chicago hosting Dallas at 9 p.m. before Connecticut visits Seattle at 10 p.m. on League Pass.
On Thursday on the weekly Amazon Prime games, New York returns home for the first time since the season opener on May 8 and hosts Golden State at 8 p.m. at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn before Phoenix hosts Los Angeles at 10 p.m.
Also, at 8 on League Pass, Minnesota hosts Toronto.
On Friday, the triple header on ION has Atlanta hosting Dallas at 7:30 p.m., the same time Indiana hosts Golden State before Seattle hosts Connecticut, the latter also on League Pass.
On Saturday, which was dark last week, CBS and Paramount+ kick in with Chicago hosting Minnesota at 1 p.m., and defending champion Las Vegas hosting L.A. 8 p.m. while at 6 p.m., Toronto hosts Portland, the two newest teams meeting the first time.
After a break next season, the expansion continues with Cleveland returning in 2028, Detroit doing likewise in 2029, and Philadelphia coming on board in 2030.
