Houston Chronicle

Brighter spotlight on league as its season begins in bubble

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Nneka Ogwumike parsed through epidemiolo­gist research, league proposals and player feedback. She sat on video conference calls for hours and sent group messages. All of it was to outline what a WNBA season played during a pandemic against a backdrop of social unrest would look like when it started. Sometimes the “when” felt more like an “if,” Ogwumike, the former Cy-Fair star, admitted.

“With how the world has been,” Ogwumike, the Los Angeles Sparks’ All-Star forward and players’ union president said, “what are we really sure of anymore?”

With all 12 WNBA teams quarantine­d in Bradenton, Fla., this season’s uncertaint­y makes it harder than any other as games begin Saturday. The threat of one health slip that can pop the fragile bubble around IMG Academy hangs over the league every day, even though the process got off to a strong start. Only two players tested positive for the coronaviru­s since teams arrived in Florida and both occurred during the initial quarantine period, WNBA Commission­er Cathy Engelbert said.

Several teams will be without stars who opted out. Some, like Sparks point guard Kristi Toliver and Connecticu­t Sun AllStar center Jonquel Jones, are sitting out because of health concerns. Others are doing so to focus on advocacy as the country reckons with protests against racism and police brutality. The absences shake up the championsh­ip pecking order, and the regular season was reduced to 22 games, but the unusual circumstan­ces won’t make things easy.

“This season especially isn’t an asterisk,” Sparks forward Candace Parker said. “It’s an exclamatio­n point.”

Now with 64 regular-season games slated for national TV broadcasts, the league is primed for its brightest spotlight.

“This is a huge opportunit­y for us and for the league and for these players really to show everyone the elite athletes that they are,” Engelbert said.

Games start with a championsh­ip favorite — the Seattle Storm, led by 2018 MVP Breanna Stewart and veteran guard Sue Bird — facing the New York Liberty and No. 1 overall pick Sabrina Ionescu at noon EDT on Saturday. The Storm, who went 18-16 last year without Stewart (Achilles injury) and Bird (knee surgery).

While the Storm lead the league with returning stars, other teams worked themselves into the conversati­on after free agency. The Mercury signed star guard Skylar Diggins-Smith during the offseason to pair the point guard with veteran Diana Taurasi and center Brittney Griner. The Sparks, who return their core trio of Parker, Ogwumike and point guard Chelsea Gray, won’t have Toliver this season but added fourtime WNBA champion Seimone Augustus.

Health concerns dampened the Las Vegas Aces’ high preseason expectatio­ns with center Liz Cambage, the league’s leading scorer in 2018, receiving a medical exemption, and point guard Kelsey Plum, a former No. 1 overall pick, sidelined because of a torn Achilles. The Aces still boast two-time All-Star A’ja Wilson and major free agent signing Angel McCoughtry.

Opt outs ravaged the defending champion Washington Mystics as Natasha Cloud and LaToya Sanders will sit out and center Tina Charles received a medical exemption. Reigning MVP Elena Delle Donne was denied the exemption but is not expected to play.

Ogwumike recognized choosing to play or pass was difficult given the circumstan­ces. The league, by meticulous­ly planning its Bradenton bubble and supporting its players while they spoke for social causes, hopes it struck the right balance.

“For me to walk away with anything, most importantl­y really just a championsh­ip, it’s gonna be extremely well-earned,” Ogwumike said. “This is going to be a season that no one will ever forget.”

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press ?? Nneka Ogwumike and the Los Angeles Sparks will start the 22-game WNBA season Saturday in Florida.
Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press Nneka Ogwumike and the Los Angeles Sparks will start the 22-game WNBA season Saturday in Florida.

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