Connecticut Post

Sue Bird officially re-signs with Storm for 20th season

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SEATTLE — Four-time WNBA champion Sue Bird re-signed with the Seattle Storm on Monday for what will be her 20th season with the team.

Bird’s signing has been expected all offseason but seemed to be delayed while the team figured out the rest of its roster. The 11-time All-Star has spent her entire WNBA career with the Storm after the franchise made her the No. 1 pick in 2002.

This season will be her 18th on the court with Seattle after missing the 2013 and 2019 seasons due to injuries.

“Seattle and the Storm franchise have been home for my entire career,” Bird said in a statement. “This is a special team and I’m looking forward to getting back on the court with them as well as representi­ng this great city and our amazing fans.”

The 40-year-old Bird is coming off another championsh­ip season after Seattle won its fourth title playing in the WNBA bubble in Florida. Bird shot a careerbest 49.4% from the field and 46.4% on 3-pointers last season, while averaging 9.8 points and 5.2 assists per

game. She was limited to 11 regular-season games due to a bone bruise in her knee.

Bird appeared in all six of Seattle’s playoff games and set a WNBA playoff record with 16 assists in the Storm’s victory over Las Vegas in the opening game of the Finals.

“Sue Bird has been synonymous with Storm basketball for two decades, leading this franchise to four WNBA championsh­ips,” Storm general manager Alisha Valavanis said. “She is not only one of the best to ever play the game

but one of the most important leaders in it. She has been integral in the growth of the league and its impact off the court. We are thrilled she’ll be back to lead the Storm this season.”

Bird’s Hall-of-Fameworthy basketball resume includes four Olympic gold medals, four FIBA world championsh­ips, two NCAA titles and the four WNBA crowns.

She could add one more Olympics opportunit­y should she be selected for the U.S. team for the Tokyo Olympics this summer.

TEMPE, Ariz. — J.J. Watt has agreed to a two-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals, showing that the franchise will be aggressive once again in their push to snap a five-year playoff drought.

The team announced the deal with the free-agent edge rusher on Monday. Watt was released last month by the Houston Texans, for whom he won three NFL Defensive Player of the Year awards.

A person familiar with the contract told The Associated Press that the total package is worth $31 million. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team did not reveal any terms.

A five-time All-Pro, Watt — who turns 32 in three weeks — has been one of the NFL’s best players for a decade, but asked out in Houston, which is undergoing a roster upheaval. Watt joins another former Texans star, wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins, in Arizona. Hopkins was acquired by the Cardinals in a one-sided trade a year ago.

Watt had one year remaining on a six-year, $100 million contract with the Texans.

Watt’s signing is an indication that the Cardinals are willing to spend money in their effort to return to

the playoffs for the first time since 2015. They finished with an 8-8 record in 2020, losing five of their last seven games to fall just short of the postseason.

Defensive coordinato­r Vance Joseph can now add Watt to a group that already has veteran edge rusher Chandler Jones, who had 19 sacks in 2019 before his 2020 season was cut short by a biceps injury. The Cardinals also have young playmakers such as linebacker Isaiah Simmons and Pro Bowl safety Budda Baker.

Hopkins foreshadow­ed Watt’s arrival in the desert a few weeks ago on Instagram, when he posted a picture of the two players,

including Watt in a photoshopp­ed Cardinals jersey with the message “Let’s finish what we started … ”

Watt’s arrival will certainly ratchet up the pressure on third-year Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury, who wasn’t quite able to push Arizona into the postseason in 2020. Kingsbury’s known for his offensive acumen — and was brought to mentor 2019 No. 1 overall pick quarterbac­k Kyler Murray — but now the defense might be just as important to the Cardinals’ success.

Though he has been plagued by injuries in recent years, Watt started all 128 games in which he appeared in the past 10 years after entering the league as

Houston’s first-round selection, 11th overall, in the 2011 draft out of Wisconsin. In 2017, he was selected as the Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year for his work in helping Houston recover from Hurricane Harvey. Watt, who long has been lauded for his humanitari­an efforts, helped raise more than $40 million in hurricane relief in 2017.

He was the league’s top defensive player in 2012, 2014 and 2015. Then injuries began to slow him. He appeared in only three games in 2016 and five the next season, sidelined by back problems and then a broken leg. In 2019, Watt missed half of the schedule with a torn pectoral muscle.

He returned to play the entire 2020 season and was effective, though not dominant.

So the Cardinals likely are not getting a vintage Watt, the only player in NFL history with 20 or more sacks and 10 or more passes defended in a single season, doing it in both 2012 and 2014. He’s tied for fifth among defensive lineman in league history with six touchdowns in the regular season, including three TD catches.

He has 101 career sacks, and over the past decade leads the league in tackles for losses (172), quarterbac­k hits (281), multi-sack games (26) and sack yards (713 1-2).

 ?? Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press ?? Seattle Storm guard Sue Bird brings the ball up the court during the second half of Game 2 of the WNBA Finals against the Las Vegas Aces last year in Bradenton, Fla.
Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press Seattle Storm guard Sue Bird brings the ball up the court during the second half of Game 2 of the WNBA Finals against the Las Vegas Aces last year in Bradenton, Fla.
 ?? Eric Christian Smith / Associated Press ?? Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt celebrates during the second half of a 2020 NFL wild-card playoff game against the Buffalo Bills in Houston. Watt has agreed to a two-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals.
Eric Christian Smith / Associated Press Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt celebrates during the second half of a 2020 NFL wild-card playoff game against the Buffalo Bills in Houston. Watt has agreed to a two-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals.

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