Los Angeles Times

Sparks open 22-game WNBA season July 25

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

When the WNBA released the schedule for its pandemic-shortened season Monday, the list dutifully designated home teams for each matchup. But home might not mean much more than a jersey color this season because everyone is calling the WNBA bubble at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., home, where players “eat, breathe, sleep basketball,” Sparks guard Sydney Wiese said.

“For [the season] to even be happening is a blessing within itself,” Wiese said in a virtual news conference Monday. “So now, now that we’re here, we have to make the most of it, embrace it, roll with the waves that are presented to us.”

The Sparks start the 22game regular season July 25 against the star-studded Phoenix Mercury with Diana Taurasi, Skylar DigginsSmi­th and Brittney Griner. The season opener at noon Pacific time on ABC is one of 13 regular-season Sparks games to be broadcast on national television on ABC, ESPN/ESPN2 and CBS Sports Network. The remaining games will be available on Spectrum SportsNet or WNBA League Pass.

Players and staff memmouse bers exchanged the comfort of their homes, families and friends for their careers this summer, but the controlled atmosphere also makes everything simple, Wiese said. She’s enjoyed the structure. Sparks coach Derek Fisher said he thinks games will be better with teams on a level playing field with no one hampered by travel or time zone changes. It’s a simple silver lining to a situation clouded in controvers­y from the beginning.

When players first arrived last week, ESPN’s Kayla Johnson shared video sent from inside the IMG Academy campus showing a dirty laundry room with a trap perched in the corner. A worm appeared to be on the floor of a room.

Social media blew up over the unsanitary conditions. During the past week, however, the problems have been rectified, Sparks guard Seimone Augustus assured.

“This is unknown, uncharted territory for a lot of people,” Augustus said. “So you got to give us a chance, give the league a chance to clean some of those things up.”

Augustus wore a mask while speaking to reporters via webcam Monday. She said she feels “as safe as we can feel.” She said trams are sanitized, hotel rooms are deep-cleaned every few days and practice courts are scrubbed between each team’s session. Everyone is careful to adhere to social distancing outside of practices. They elbow-bump as greetings. They get tested every day.

Manatee County, where IMG Academy and Bradenton are located, reported a record-high 470 new positive cases Sunday, contributi­ng to Florida’s statewide total of 15,283 new cases.

“We feel like we can utilize the discipline it’s going to take to stay safe and healthy [during COVID-19] ... to be great at anything,” Fisher said.

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