Tag Archives: WNBA

OPINION: Seattle is Prepped for a Groundbreaking Storm Season

by Maggie Mertens


I hadn’t actually seen Climate Pledge Arena (CPA) until the first Storm preseason game at the end of April. I used to live in Lower Queen Anne and was used to the “old” Key Arena: dark, cavernous, sterile, and cold from the outside. 

Sue Bird was used to it, too. 

The first time she walked into CPA for a Kraken game, “there was a little part of me that was sad,” she said. Sad because Key Arena had been Bird’s home court since she was drafted into the WNBA two decades ago.

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OPINION: WNBA Troubles, Public Outrage Show Need for Investment & Growth

by Maggie Mertens


From the absurd to the terrifying, the most recent stories about the WNBA paint a dire need for change in the league. 

Thanks to reporting from Howard Megdal published in Sports Illustrated last week, we now know that New York Liberty owners Joe Wu Tsai, a billionaire cofounder of the Chinese company Alibaba, and his wife, Clara, got sick and tired of their players having to fly commercial and nearly missing games to do so — so they did something about it. 

Continue reading OPINION: WNBA Troubles, Public Outrage Show Need for Investment & Growth

OPINION: Climate Pledge Arena Will Be the Storm’s Home, Too

As a new arena brings massive investment and support for the Seattle Kraken, the Storm is overshadowed.

by Maggie Mertens


You might think, based on the constant media coverage of Seattle’s new NHL team and the announcements carefully marketing what will soon be known as Climate Pledge Arena as “the future home of the Seattle Kraken” at seemingly every opportunity, that the renovated arena in Seattle Center will be used exclusively for the NHL team that has yet to play a single game.

In fact, a storied team will also make Climate Pledge Arena their home: the WNBA’s Seattle Storm. For the past three years I’ve followed the arena renovation news with interest because I can’t wait for the most successful sports team in Seattle history  — which continues to win, by the way  — to play in an arena worthy of their excellence. 

Continue reading OPINION: Climate Pledge Arena Will Be the Storm’s Home, Too

OPINION: Noelle Quinn and the Importance of Black Women Coaches in the WNBA

by Maggie Mertens, contributing columnist


When Noelle Quinn was suddenly named the head coach of the Seattle Storm earlier this month after Dan Hughes’ retirement, it was historic. In a league where the vast majority of the players are Black women, Quinn is the first Black head coach for the Storm and brings the total number of Black women current head coaches in the WNBA up to two. Women coaches, and especially Black women coaches, are vastly underrepresented in professional sports. 

Since the WNBA began in 1997, there have been 86 head coaches. Forty-four have been women. When the league debuted with eight teams, six head coaches were women. In the years since, that percentage has gone down. At the beginning of the 2021 season, there were just four women head coaches in the WNBA out of 12 teams. Quinn’s appointment brings that tally up to five. Last year there were zero Black women head coaches in the WNBA. Quinn became just the 19th Black woman head coach in the league’s history.

Quinn noted in her first press conference after the announcement of her promotion that she felt the significance of that history. She listed off all of those 18 Black women head coaches who came before her: “You talk about Pokey Chatman, Teresa Edwards, Jennifer Gillom, Carolyn Jenkins, Vickie Johnson, Trudi Lacey, Cynthia Cooper, Cheryl Miller, Carolyn Peck, Julie Rousseau, Amber Stocks, Karleen Thompson, Shell Dailey, Jessie Kenlaw, Cathy Parson, Taj McWilliams-Franklin, Denise Taylor, and Penny Toler,” Quinn said. “They crawled, so I can walk. I sit on those shoulders … For me, it’s important that I’m not just a woman — I’m a Black woman.”

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With Her 4th Championship in Hand, Sue Bird Is the GOAT of Seattle Sports

by Maggie Mertens

Not many athletes can say they’ve brought four championship titles to one city, but thanks to a dominant performance in the WNBA Finals this week, Sue Bird can. While a championship-starved city like Seattle should be bowing at her feet, instead, her name is often lost in the shuffle of less-dominant male athletes when we talk about this city’s heroes.

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WNBA Players Have Led the Way in Athlete Protest for Racial Justice Since 2016

by Maggie Mertens


The world of sports came to a standstill this week when the Milwaukee Bucks announced they would not be playing their NBA playoff games on Wednesday or Thursday to protest the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin on August 23. Soon, all the NBA teams scheduled to play had joined the strike. Several Major League Baseball teams also opted not to play, including the Seattle Mariners, the team with the most Black players in the league. Five Major League Soccer matches and two National Hockey League games were also postponed after pressure from players.

Continue reading WNBA Players Have Led the Way in Athlete Protest for Racial Justice Since 2016

OPINION: The Era of “Shut up and Dribble” is Officially Over

by M. Anthony Davis


If you would have told me in March that the NBA season would be cancelled due to COVID, I might have believed you. That would seem plausible. But to lose the season to racism? I can’t say I saw this coming. 

Four years ago, in a preseason game versus the Green Bay Packers, San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick was photographed sitting on the sidelines during the national anthem. He had opted not to stand for the anthem prior to this particular event, but that fact had gone mostly unnoticed. After the image went viral, it ultimately led to him famously kneeling during the anthem, an act that eventually got him blackballed from the NFL. Now, in the midst of a global pandemic that we thought had the potential to end the season for health reasons, NBA players have decided to boycott playoff games as an act of protest against police brutality — and they made their stand on the anniversary of Kaepernick’s first recorded protest. 

The NBA Bubble was designed to protect players from the deadly virus and allow some semblance of the 2019–20 season to play out despite the pandemic, after the season was halted completely on March 11 amid the outbreak. The bubble literally separated players from the outside world. Yet, even with “Black Lives Matter” written on the courts, social justice phrases displayed on the backs of jerseys, and all the kneeling and gesturing before games — the bubble proved to be unable to protect players from the harsh realities of the outside world. Unarmed Black people are still being killed by police. 

On August 23, Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old father of six, was shot seven times in the back by a police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Blake was shot from behind while attempting to enter his vehicle, where three of his six children sat and watched. The shooting of Blake led to protests in Kenosha, in which two more people were shot by a self-deputized white teenager, Kyle Rittenhouse, who was part of a militia claiming to protect the city from protesters. Videos circulating social media show Rittenhouse talking to police, who gave him bottled water and thanked him for his assistance. In the wake of these shootings, and with lack of action by local authorities, the players decided they had seen enough. In a statement released by the Milwaukee Bucks, players said, “… Despite the overwhelming plea for change, there has been no action, so our focus today cannot be on basketball.”

Before the NBA entered the bubble on July 30, a few outspoken players objected to the idea of returning to play. The emerging leader of those voices was Kyrie Irving, who had been panned by the media previously for, among other things, claiming that the earth is flat. While Irving may not have been the best messenger, his concerns regarding resuming the NBA season were clear. He claimed that playing NBA games would take attention away from protests around the country demanding justice after the viral 8-minute video of George Floyd being murdered by a nonchalant officer kneeling on his neck. Many pundits criticized Irving, claiming that the idea that people would be forced to choose between watching basketball games and protesting police brutality was ridiculous. A few members of the media went so far as to say that the idea that basketball could distract from protests was an insult to the intelligence of Black people. Because, of course, claims that the NBA fan base, which is assumed to be primarily Black, would be unable to multitask, was a direct indictment of us as Black people. I think the point those arguments failed to realize was that the players, who also have families and friends affected by these events, have platforms and connections big enough to enact change. By continuing to play basketball, these players are allowing the continuation of the status quo. Looking back, it seems that Irving wasn’t so wrong after all. 

I don’t agree with Irving’s assumption that we as fans couldn’t watch basketball and participate in protests. I would argue that basketball is not important enough to make me oblivious to the injustice around me. I also live in Seattle — the former home of CHOP — where protests are still happening every day. I do agree with Irving’s idea that the players have an ability to enact change. I believe the players are actually more powerful now. 

Returning to play the bubble games allowed both dedicated and casual NBA fans to return to a false sense of normalcy. By playing those bubble games and deciding to boycott now, during the playoffs, the players are making a much bigger statement and delivering a much more substantial financial blow to the institution than they would have done if they’d never played in the bubble at all. This moment will live in history forever. The players have the unique opportunity to leverage the remainder of the season to get wealthy owners to lean on their political connections to achieve some form of tangible justice for Jacob Blake.

When the Milwaukee Bucks players decided not to leave their locker room before game five of the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs, ESPN’s Adrien Wojnarowski reported that the Bucks players were on a conference call with Wisconsin Attorney General Josh Kaul and Lieutenant Governor Mandela Barnes. ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne reported that Bucks players asked Kaul and Barnes about tangible things they could do in the short and long term. As it turns out, boycotting the game was step one. It immediately garnered national attention and was followed by announcements that all three scheduled NBA games would be cancelled and later that three WNBA games and three MLB games (including the Seattle Mariners, whose players voted unanimously to not play) were also cancelled. 

The era of “shut up and dribble” is officially over. It has always been evident that players had sway with the general public. But it is the wealthy, elite class of white owners who have actual political power — and it will take a combination of both to create the change we desperately need. The Bucks players reaching out to politicians from the locker room is the ultimate symbol of hope. They are taking steps toward bridging the gap between statements and gestures and crossing into the realm of tangible systemic change. This change must be made with policy and law. If this change costs us the rest of the NBA season, it will be well worth it. 


M. Anthony Davis (Mike Davis) is a local journalist covering arts, culture, and sports.

Featured Image is attributed to Craig Hatfield under a Creative Commons 2.0 license.

Photos: Storm Fans Celebrate Third WNBA Title

by Susan Fried

Thousands of people lined the streets around Seattle Center for a parade and filled Key Arena for a rally Sunday, September 16, for the WNBA Champion Seattle Storm. The team traveled a short distance around the Seattle Center in trolley cars to the Key Arena, where they were greeted by the adoring fans and a few dignitaries including Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, Seattle Police Chief Carmen Best, and Washington Senator Maria Cantwell. Six-thousand people filled Key Arena and heard from the players and owners, watched highlights from the season, and cheered wildly when veteran Sue Bird said that she would be back next year for her 17th season.

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