Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Griner is focus of All-Star weekend

- Associated Press

Sue Bird and Sylvia Fowles are playing in the WNBA AllStar Game for the last time. Candace Parker and Kahleah Copper are looking for some bragging rights. Some of the league’s biggest stars get to try for a 4-point shot.

And everyone is thinking about one person: Brittney Griner.

Griner’s continued detention in Russia is front and center as the WNBA holds one of its marquee events in Chicago for the first time. Bird and the rest of the All-Stars wore T-shirts with Griner’s name and No. 42 for practice Saturday, and the league also plans to continue its push for Griner’s release during Sunday’s game at the home of the defending champion Sky.

“I think for all of us, we just want to always keep BG’s name at the forefront in everything we do,” Bird said. “Yeah, every now and then we’ll answer questions about All-Star and talk about the basketball, but you’re going to see her name on the back of all of our shirts, and so like I said, it doesn’t really shift. We want it to always be there.”

Griner, 31, pleaded guilty Thursday to drug possession charges in a case that could see her sentenced to up to 10 years in prison. That same day, Bird watched her fiancee, soccer star Megan Rapinoe, receive the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom at the White House.

Rapinoe had BG and a rose stitched on her jacket for the occasion, and Bird sported a “WE ARE BG” pin. Bird said she didn’t get any “personal time” with President Joe Biden, but she said Rapinoe “has taken the opportunit­ies in those moments when she’s been able to speak to the President to talk about BG, so I do know that.”

Griner was first detained at Moscow’s Sheremetye­vo Airport in February, when she was returning to play basketball in Russia. Police said they found vape canisters containing cannabis oil in her luggage. Speaking through an interprete­r, Griner told the court Thursday she had no intention of committing a crime and acted unintentio­nally because she had packed in a hurry. The trial was then adjourned until Thursday.

Griner’s guilty plea could be an effort by her and her advisers to expedite the court proceeding­s.

“Obviously she’s part of our family and our No. 1 priority is getting her home,” All-Star guard Arike Ogunbowale said. “She shouldn’t be there. She’s been there too long. So obviously we’re going to talk about

her any chance we get.”

Griner’s detention comes at a low point in relations between the United States and Russia. The State Department’s designatio­n of Griner as wrongfully detained put her case under the supervisio­n of its special presidenti­al envoy for hostage affairs, effectivel­y the government’s chief hostage negotiator.

Biden called Griner’s wife, Cherelle, on Wednesday to assure her that he’s doing all he can to win Brittney’s release as soon as possible. They spoke after Biden read a letter from Brittney Griner in which she said she feared she’d never return home.

“We talk about ‘We are BG’ and what that means to us,” All-Star guard Skylar DigginsSmi­th said. “Just trying to embody her spirit, carry her legacy on and just stay alert for her as far as what we can do in our

efforts to help bring her home and really get that message out there.”

Griner is an honorary starter for her eighth All-Star selection. It’s No. 13 for Bird and No. 8 for Fowles, two pillars of the WNBA who plan to retire after this season.

3-Point Contest: Once Allie Quigley got going, it was all over. The 3-point queen put on quite a show — again. Quigley won the WNBA’s 3-Point Contest for a record fourth time Saturday, stamping herself as one of the greatest shooters in the history of the league. No one in the NBA or WNBA has as many 3-point titles as Quigley, who also won the competitio­n last year. She had been tied with Larry Bird and Craig Hodges with three apiece. Skills Challenge: New York’s Sabrina Ionescu and Zoe Brooks, a guard from New Jersey who has committed to N.C. State, combined to win the Skills Challenge. They defeated Indiana’s NaLyssa Smith and Victoria Flores, a prep guard from Texas, in the final.

 ?? Stacy Revere / Getty Images ?? Chicago’s Allie Quigley competes in the 3-point contest on Saturday. Quigley, the defending champion, earned the win for a record fourth time.
Stacy Revere / Getty Images Chicago’s Allie Quigley competes in the 3-point contest on Saturday. Quigley, the defending champion, earned the win for a record fourth time.

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