Taurasi played her final game for the Mercury on Sept. 25 — Phoenix lost to the Minnesota Lynx 101-88 in the first round of the playoffs. She didn't comment on whether she would return at the time and ...
Diana Taurasi was cagey about what’s next, now that she’s retired from the WNBA. “That’s a tough question,” she said at the ...
While her playing career is now long over, basketball legend Cheryl Miller still has her fingerprints on various aspects of ...
Gray started her WNBA career with the Dallas Wings, and after spending five seasons in Dallas, she moved to Atlanta. Gray had a breakout season with the Dream and lodged two All-Star nods in her ...
Retired LA Spark Layshia Clarendon — the WNBA's first out trans nonbinary player — will join the newly resurrected LGBTQ Sports Hall of Fame.
The three players have collected a combined four WNBA championships, four Olympic gold medals, 13 All-Star selections and three All-Star Game MVP awards. Even if you aren't an Irish fan ...
"Diana Taurasi is one of the greatest competitors to ever play the game of basketball ... A three-time WNBA champion, two-time WNBA Finals MVP, 2009 WNBA MVP, 11-time WNBA All-Star and 10-time ...
She made All-Star (and Olympic) appearances across three decades and led the Mercury to the WNBA Finals as recently as 2021. Though her scoring dipped to 14.9 points per game last year ...
Since being drafted by the Mercury in 2004, the WNBA logo herself has made an unchangeable ... At the time of her retirement, Taurasi is second all-time in All-Star selections, trailing only ...
earning six gold medals with Team USA and making 11 WNBA All-Star Game appearances. With a flair for heroic plays and her trademark bun hairstyle, she was voted by fans in 2021 as the WNBA’s ...
She received the league’s Rookie of the Year award in her debut season, with the following year seeing her named to the All-Star ... game. “She leaves a lasting legacy and the future of the ...