The Guru WNBA and UPSHOT Reports: Citron Buzzer-Beater Enables Washington to Ruin Expansion Toronto Comeback; Golden State Tops Seattle; Jacksonville Builds 2-Game UPSHOT Lead on Greensboro by Beating Groove
By Mel Greenberg @womhoopsgurux
The NBA Finals are not the only place where dramatic shots at the finish are deciding outcomes.
In the same week the NBA New York Knicks won Game 4 on an offensive tip-in completing an all-time comeback from a 29-point deficit, Indiana and Washington followed some previous thrilling game enders in the WNBA’s 30th season Monday with the visiting Fever beating the Mystics on Caitlin Clark’s buzzer-beating 3-pointer.
On Thursday Indiana at home where Clark and Aliyah Boston became the first 30-point double-double duo in league history, the contest saw Chicago’s Skylar Diggins force overtime with a long 3-pointer at the end of regulation before the Fever prevailed.
On Friday night in the first of two games in the on-going intra-conference Commissioner’s Cup series card, it was Washington’s turn as second-year pro Sonia Citron completed a 17-point performance with what ESPN termed “a miraculous buzzer-beater” to clip expansion Toronto 86-85 thrilling a Mystics home crowd of 4,200 at the small CareFirst Arena.
In the other Friday night game later out in the Northwest second-year Golden State (8-5) barely survived a 19-10 fourth-quarter rally winning 76-72 over host Seattle (3-12) before a Storm crowd of 10,648 at ClimatePledge Arena which saw their team drop its eighth straight loss.
Also, on Friday night in the new four-team UPSHOT League the first-place Jacksonville Wave (6-2) won 82-70 on the road over the Greensboro Groove (4-4).
Citron Rescues Mystics Beating Tempo
In Washington’s win rookie reserve Lauren Betts, the fourth overall pick in April’s draft out of NCAA champion UCLA, had a season-best 18 points shooting 8-for-9 from the field.
Second-year pro Kiki Iriafen, an all-Rookie choice last season along with teammate Citron, was idle with an ankle injury suffered recently, and second-year pro Lucy Olsen out of Villanova and Iowa, did not get into the contest per Sydney John’s coaching decision.
Iriafen’s injury made Betts’ season-best 21 minutes possible to fortify the post slots.
Michaela Onyenwere, an offseason assistant coach at her alma mater UCLA, added 17 points while Shakira Austin had 12 points and 11 boards for her fifth double-double on the Mystics’ 2026 schedule.
Austin playing center also committed a WNBA season-worst nine turnovers, a career-high.
Overall, the Mystics overcame a season-worst 22 miscues and a mediocre long-range shooting with just two makes from deep in 18 attempts.
Toronto’s Marina Marbrey collected 18 of her 27 points in the final period with an overall 5-of-10 from distance, while Brittney Sykes scored 20 against her former team that dealt the Syracuse star to Seattle during last season before the Tempo took her in the expansion draft that also involved Portland.
The Washington poor ball handling allowed Toronto a season-high 18 steals, the most in the league behind 20 from Seattle last summer.
Washington held a 14-point lead with 3:21 left in the game.
Marbrey then went on a surge with three from the line, assisted on a layupand then nailed two from beyond the arc over 25 seconds and it became a two-possession game with 1:51 left in regulation.
Toronto, without leading scorer Nayara Sabally (12.4 ppg on 56% from the field) due to an ankle injury, continued to rally and the Tempo went ahead and held the lead with 2.1 seconds left and Washington in possession.
Betts got tied up with 2.1 left but tipped the ensuing jump ball to Citron for the winning shot, a fadeaway jumper.
“We drew up (the winning play) from a standpoint of never flinching and hanging in there,” Johnson said afterwards. “I thought we deserved some good luck. We’ve been grinding and we’ve been in some close games and big-time player Sonia is and Lauren was outstanding.
“It’s hard to win in this league this league is awesome, and it was more awesome that the Mystic came out with a win today.
“(Sonia) made a big-time shot. It’s good to celebrate that.”
On the other side following the heartbreaking finish, Toronto coach Sandy Brondello said, “We have to put 40 minutes together. We gave ourselves a chance and just got unlucky at the end. Great shot by Sonia.”
Valkyries Edge Storm
Janelle Salaun used five 3-pointers to overall score 22 points for Golden State while free agent Gabby Williams scored 19 against her former Seattle team.
The Valkyries led 69-57 with 4:23 left in regulation and then went cold the rest of the way from the field shooting 1 of 16 allowing the Storm rally.
Seattle was down a point with the ball, but rookie Flau’jae Johnson missed a layup and the visitors got two from the line from Tiffany Hayes with 21.3 left.
The Storm got back within a point with 13.4 remaining and then Williams got two from the line and Kiah Stokes blocked a Seattle attempted make from deep.
Hayes, a reserve, scored 17 from the bench while Veronica Burton had 11 points and eight assists.
Golden State was a near-perfect 20-of-23 from the line.
The Valkyries win ruined a career-high 26-point performance from free agent Natisha Hiedemann.
Before the Seattle closing surge, Golden State had gone ahead 59-44 in the third quarter as the visitors burst from the break on a 19-6 start to the period.
Valkyries coach Natalie Nakase praised Hayes, a former UConn star with 5,000+ points in the WNBA who put off retirement to join Golden State last season when they made their debut setting records such as 18,000+ sellouts for every game played to date at the Chase Center in San Francisco, total wins for an expansion team besides becoming a playoff qualifier.
“Five thousand points is incredible for a player who was maybe about to walk away from the game,” Nakase said. “She made two crucial free throws. Game on the line. I thought she stepped up with confidence. Even with the crowd trying to freeze her out.
“She did an amazing job coming in down the stretch. She made two blocks. Tough to win on the road. I thought it was the first time we felt that so I have to do a better job to prepare us for these road games.”
Looking Ahead
On Saturday, Connecticut hosts Indiana at 6 p.m. on the NBC Sports Network and Peacock while at 8 p.m. comes the blockbuster West showdown of Minnesota at Las Vegas.
League Pass has the other two games, Dallas at expansion Portland at 8:30 p.m., and Los Angeles at Phoenix at 10 p.m.
On Sunday, Washington is at New York at 3 p.m., on NBA TV, which is now part of the League Pass package at no extra cost, and Atlanta is at Toronto the same time on League Pass.
On Monday, Las Vegas at Dallas at 8 p.m. is on USA while at the same time League Pass will carry Phoenix at Minnesota.
At 10 p.m., Los Angeles at Golden State is on NBCSN and Peacock.
UPSHOT ACTION
In the the new four-team UPSHOT League, in Jacksonville’s road win over Greensboro to increase the Waves’s first place lead to two games over the Groove, now tied at 4-4 with the Savannah Steel, Ariel Hearn scored 19 points with six boards and six assists, Tennessee grad Rennia Davis had 18 points, and Lindsey Pulliam scored 13.
Greensboro got 20 points from Jessica Timmons, Philadelphia’s Diamond Johnson scored 16, Kamaria McDaniel scored 14, while Colorado grad Mya Hollingshed had eight points and nine rebounds.
Jacskonville coach Jess Bogia, a native of Philadelphia, said, “I thought we came out really locked into the defensive game plan early and showed with our ability to contain Diamond and Timmons.
“Our theme for the week was communication and sharing the ball. I saw a definite conscious effort to do that - passing up good shots for great shots,” she continued.
“Just overall happy with the way we executed the game plan. Now we get to do it all again tomorrow.”
The teams play again in North Carolina, Saturday at 4 p.m., while Sunday the Savannah Steel is back at the Charlotte Crown (2-6) at 2 p.m.
Games can be watched free on the league’s YouTube channel.