Rookie Gillespie will sit out season
Sky retain her rights; Prince, Dean waived in roster trim
Kiah Gillespie already had missed out on opportunities because of the coronavirus pandemic. She wasn’t able to lead Florida State on an NCAA Tournament run. Her college graduation ceremony was canceled.
Then, most recently, the third-round WNBA draft pick found herself on the chopping block of the salary-cap-hindered Sky without ever having a chance to show her talents.
“It’s been intense,” Gillespie, a forward, said of the many disappointments, “but I’ve just been trying to find the positive in it.”
So, with teams forced to make roster cuts by Tuesday before starting training camp, Gillespie decided to sit out the season, allowing the Sky to retain her rights for next year. In the meantime, she aims to continue developing her game overseas.
“If all goes as planned in 2021, she has the opportunity to come into training camp and really be comfortable,” Sky general manager and coach James Wade said. “What it allows us to do is have the rights to a player who potentially down the road can be an effective player.”
Gillespie said there are “a lot of advantages” to taking a gap year.
“They have the time to see me and critique me at the level where I’m playing with a lot of professionals,” she said, “rather than just having me coming straight in from college and not . . . knowing what it’s like and [having] a level of professionalism before I even step into the league.”
In addition to Gillespie making her decision, the Sky waived forward Alexis Prince and their other 2020 third-round pick, Japreece Dean, to finalize their roster by the deadline, which was set last week in order for players to get paid starting June 1 despite the season being postponed indefinitely.
Although cut players won’t get paid, they’ll receive health benefits through June 30. The WNBA started offering those benefits to 2020 rookies on May 1.
Wade said the cuts were especially difficult because he didn’t have an opportunity to see players in a training-camp setting.
“It’s really tough,” he said. “You always want to give the players an opportunity to show themselves, to maybe magnify the strengths that you thought you saw and minimize the weakness that you thought you saw on video or scouting them. So it’s a little unfair in that regard, but . . . there’s bigger things going on, and you just can’t get overwhelmed with thinking about what’s unfair or not.”