Chicago Sun-Times

VANDERSLOO­T MAKING HER POINT FOR SKY

RECORD-SETTING POINT GUARD IS THE HEART AND SOUL OF THE FRANCHISE

- BY ANNIE COSTABILE acostabile@suntimes.com @anniecosta­bile

If you were to describe Courtney Vandersloo­t as the backbone of the Sky, you’d only be partially correct. The word “backbone” means support or foundation. While Vandersloo­t is certainly resolute, her impact on the franchise goes far beyond that.

Vandersloo­t isn’t just the bedrock, she’s also the oxy-gen, the heartbeat and the engine that keeps the Sky moving.

Her 9,253 minutes, 324 games and 11 seasons are the most in Sky franchise history. In that time, she has set WNBA records, broken them, and set them again.

She became the first player in league history to average double digits (10) in assists in 2020.

Her passes — dump-offs, behind-the-back, no-look and ones through defenders — have her fourth on the WNBA’s career assists leaderboar­d. Her 5-8, 137-pound frame has taken her to the rim enough times that she’s second on the Sky’s career scoring list with 3,288 career points. Allie Quigley, her wife, is first with 3,318.

But none of this is new. Vandersloo­t has been leaving fans speechless, coaches awestruck and teammates with knocks to the head from passes they weren’t expecting since her days growing up in Kent, Washington.

Back then, much like now, Vandersloo­t was being overlooked.

“She’s a featherwei­ght,” said Jodie Berry, now an assistant coach at Oregon, “but is so gritty and tough, and she had that even back then. She wanted the ball and sought out contact.”

Berry was a young assistant coach on Kelly Graves’ Gonzaga staff when Vandersloo­t was a junior in high school. After seeing her play, Berry went all-in on the kid from Kent. Vandersloo­t was the first recruit in Berry’s green coaching career in whom she had that kind of confidence.

Vandersloo­t had three offers: Montana State, Colorado State and Gonzaga.

She was sold on the Bulldogs almost instantly after meeting Graves and Berry. She said the decision undoubtedl­y changed the trajectory of her career.

While at Gonzaga, Vandersloo­t set all kinds of records. She broke Gonzaga’s season assist record as a sophomore (239), and again as a junior (321). When she broke it a third time as a senior (367), it wasn’t just the school record, it was an NCAA record.

And her most notable college record: She became the first player in NCAA history to score more than 2,000 points and total more than 1,000 assists.

Only one player has done it since, the New York Liberty’s Sabrina Ionescu, who was coached by Graves and Berry at Oregon.

It happened on a simple play in a big game. In the second round of the NCAA Tournament against UCLA in her senior year, Vandersloo­t only needed 10 points to reach the milestone. So, of course, she recorded 10 assists first. With less than 15 minutes left in the game, Vandersloo­t got a steal for a fast-break layup.

She jogged back down the court with a subtle grin on her face to chants of “Courtney.” Vandersloo­t never has been one to boast, so even a grin was memorable to her teammates and coaches.

And like Ionescu, Graves said that Vandersloo­t helped establish some buzz around women’s basketball on their campuses.

While at Gonzaga, Graves said that the number of fans at “The Kennel” grew game after game and year after year when Vandersloo­t was on the court.

Her senior year, Spokane Coliseum sold out to watch the women’s team in the NCAA Tournament. There was an undeniable hype around campus and the scrappy, gritty, record-setting point guard.

“She is the female John Stockton,” former teammate Katelan Redmon said. “That’s how Spokane sees Courtney.”

That may be how Spokane sees Vandersloo­t, but you’d be hard-pressed to hear any acknowledg­ment of her own greatness from Vandersloo­t herself. Even in the age of social media, Vandersloo­t doesn’t share highlights or All-Star nods.

You can forget about her campaignin­g for postseason awards.

Vandersloo­t’s pages are filled with photos of family and initiative­s she’s passionate about. There are a couple of EuroLeague championsh­ip posts. It’s warranted when you’re a part of two of UMMC Ekaterinbu­rg’s three consecutiv­e titles.

Vandersloo­t capped her senior year at Gonzaga with a run to the Elite Eight, and then came the 2011 WNBA Draft, where once again a young coach didn’t think twice about

investing in Vandersloo­t.

Pokey Chatman was a first-time coach in the WNBA. After leading Spartak to a 16-0 Euroleague record and its fourth consecutiv­e Euroleague Championsh­ip, Chatman was hired as general manager and coach of the Sky.

At that time players weren’t talking to teams ahead of the draft so Vandersloo­t went into it blind. She had no idea that Chatman was already sold on taking her with the Sky’s pick at No. 3 overall.

“When the court shrinks most people panic,” Chatman said. “[Vandersloo­t] becomes really calm and a mess to deal with in terms of penetratin­g the lanes. [When I drafted her] I was thinking along those lines and having that position solidified for years to come.”

Vandersloo­t was a wide-eyed rookie starting on a team with Sylvia Fowles, Epiphany Prince and Tamera Young.

Vandersloo­t was named an All-Star her rookie year and made the all-rookie team. But Berry remembers a call from her fornmer player after the season questionin­g if she had the chops for the WNBA. Chatman recalls developmen­tally, they had to remind her of her scoring capabiliti­es.

Her second year in the league Ticha Penicheiro signed a one-year contract with the Sky. Penicheiro’s career is one of constant evolution and for that reason, Chatman knew she could mentor Vandersloo­t. Chatman’s hope was that bringing in Penicheiro would show Vandersloo­t the confidence they had in her as the future of the organizati­on.

Chatman also wanted Penicheiro to help Vandersloo­t increase her scoring.

From 2011 to 2012 her scoring average went from 6.5 points to 8.9. In 2015 she averaged 11.4. Her career-high of 13.6 came during the 2020 season.

“Sometimes she passes a little too much,” UMMC Ekaterinbu­rg teammate Brittney Griner said. “I always tell her overseas she should shoot more.”

In 2020 Vandersloo­t broke the WNBA record for most assists in a game (18), set twice by Penichiero.

A screen from Ruthy Hebard freed Vandersloo­t up at the top of the key to find Quigley for an open three on the wing with less than a minute left in the game.

This season, for the sixth time in her career, she’s leading the league in assists per game with an 8.8 average.

“She has an innate ability to deliver passes on time and on target,” Diamond DeShields said. “We go through drills in practice where the players’ goal is to deflect passes. It’s challengin­g for everyone and then Sloot will go and she makes the pass. We all just look at each other like, ‘Damn, she pisses me off.’ ”

Everyone who has played with Vandersloo­t has a career highlight that includes an incredible pass and a subtle look that follows the made basket. For DeShields, it came her rookie year.

They were running a play and DeShields looped up to the top of the key from the corner, flashed down the lane and caught a lob pass from Vandersloo­t. It wasn’t the play then-coach Amber Stocks had called for, but the two of them coordinate­d it coming out of the timeout.

The two shared a glance and kept it moving. There are a lot of qualities of Vandersloo­t’s game that separate her from other point guards in the league, past and present. Her court vision, her passing and her basketball IQ are a few of them.

Graves, Chatman and current Sky coach and general manager James Wade all have said it’s like having a coach on the floor.

Wade still can recall the first time he saw Vandersloo­t play and telling his overseas teammate, a Gonzaga alum, about the dynamite point guard he saw in the 2010 NCAA Tournament.

“There’s nobody else on our entire team I want to have the ball in their hand in big moments,” Quigley said.

In 2019, Vandersloo­t finished the season with the second-best assist-to-turnover ratio (3.13) in the league.

In every Marvel movie, even the most untouchabl­e superheroe­s prove they are all human and for Vandersloo­t that moment came at the end of a career-best year.

The game is infamous now. It marked the beginning of a rivalry between the Las Vegas Aces and the Sky. Nearly two years ago to the day, on Sept. 15, both teams were playing for a trip to the WNBA semifinals.

The momentum behind the Sky was like a freight train. After beating the Phoenix Mercury in the first-round single-eliminatio­n matchup, they flew to Las Vegas with the confidence that they would earn a trip to the semifinals.

In the waning moments of the game, the Sky had a two-point lead before Vandersloo­t’s lob pass was intercepte­d by Dearica Hamby, who then sank the winning three.

“To this day I have never watched [that game],” Vandersloo­t said. “When I see the highlight I turn my head, close my eyes or change the channel. Not one time have I watched it because it would just break me.”

Wade looks back on that game and faults the officials for not seeing that Hamby had stepped out of bounds.

DeShields has watched the game only twice and faults herself for multiple missteps before that moment. Vandersloo­t owns all the responsibi­lity. The fact is, the Sky aren’t playing for a shot at their first WNBA semifinals appearance since 2016 without Vandersloo­t. They aren’t in the championsh­ip conversati­on if she isn’t there. The franchise doesn’t remain relevant over the course of its 15-year history if Vandersloo­t isn’t in a Sky jersey.

Vandersloo­t recovered from that career moment the only way she knows how, by working harder. She left Chicago and flew overseas to play for EMMC Ekaterinbu­rg. It helped, she said, that Quigley and Wade were there with her.

This year has not gone according to expectatio­ns following the signing of Candace Parker in the offseason. The Sky are locked in as the No. 6 seed in the playoffs with one game remaining in the season.

Vandersloo­t has been here before though. In her fourth season, the Sky took a 15-19 regular-season record all the way to the WNBA Finals, where they were swept by the Phoenix Mercury.

Only two pieces remain from that team, Vandersloo­t and Quigley.

“We had a very up-and-down regular season that year,” Vandersloo­t said. “We just turned it on. We won games when we needed to.”

Despite the All-Stars who have been drafted by and signed with the Sky, Vandersloo­t is the only one who has remained. She’s the constant, and the face the franchise has always seemed to be searching for.

Following this season, Vandersloo­t will become an unrestrict­ed free agent and loyalty is as much a part of her character as working hard in silence is. If it’s up to Wade, Vandersloo­t will be back in a Sky uniform in 2022.

Vandersloo­t is locked in on the remaining 2021 season, but said she never has been much of a free agent. Her first free-agency conversati­on following her rookie contract lasted no more than two minutes.

“If I’m being completely honest, I think it’s special to win a championsh­ip with the team that you’re drafted by,” Vandersloo­t said.

 ??  ??
 ?? COOPER NEILL/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Sky took Courtney Vandersloo­t with the third overall pick in the 2011 WNBA Draft, behind Maya Moore and Elizabeth Cambage.
COOPER NEILL/GETTY IMAGES The Sky took Courtney Vandersloo­t with the third overall pick in the 2011 WNBA Draft, behind Maya Moore and Elizabeth Cambage.
 ??  ??
 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/AP PHOTOS ?? Courtney Vandersloo­t had an illustriou­s career at Gonzaga, leading the Bulldogs to their only Elite Eight appearance (in 2011) and becoming the first woman to total 2,000 points and 1,000 assists.
ELAINE THOMPSON/AP PHOTOS Courtney Vandersloo­t had an illustriou­s career at Gonzaga, leading the Bulldogs to their only Elite Eight appearance (in 2011) and becoming the first woman to total 2,000 points and 1,000 assists.
 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? Courtney Vandersloo­t’s teammate Allie Quigley (left) is also her wife.
JOHN LOCHER/AP Courtney Vandersloo­t’s teammate Allie Quigley (left) is also her wife.
 ?? ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Courtney Vandersloo­t is a three-time WNBA All-Star.
ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES Courtney Vandersloo­t is a three-time WNBA All-Star.
 ?? MICHAEL GONZALES/GETTY IMAGES ?? Courtney Vandersloo­t will be an unrestrict­ed free agent after the season.
MICHAEL GONZALES/GETTY IMAGES Courtney Vandersloo­t will be an unrestrict­ed free agent after the season.

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