Los Angeles Times

Sparks MVP? It’s elementary: Dr. Watson

Team’s head athletic trainer keeps players safe and sound in the bubble, helps aspiring trainers outside of it.

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Courtney Watson is done with her doctoral degree, but Dr. Watson, as the Sparks are calling their head athletic trainer now, is not done with textbooks.

On the way to a recent practice, Sparks guard Seimone Augustus noticed how Watson was thumbing through a book on human anatomy. In her 12th year with the Sparks, Watson is always learning, always adapting.

Watson is the team’s most important asset as she helps players and coaches navigate a pandemic and condensed 22-game season. For a woman whose grandmothe­r and mother were educators, this moment seems made for Watson.

“This is just what I’m meant to do,” she said.

Sports medicine has been Watson’s passion since high school. She wanted to work in medicine, and she also was a multisport athlete, playing basketball and volleyball and running track at Westcheste­r High. She connected the two when her friend injured his ankle and she took him to physical therapy at the West Coast Sports Medicine Foundation. She was volunteeri­ng there within a week.

Watson, who studied sociology at California and earned her master’s from California University of Pennsylvan­ia, has worked in the WNBA and the NBA developmen­tal league. She’s a fixture on the sideline at the Drew League.

Nothing prepared her to face the COVID-19 pandemic hanging over the WNBA’s season. For that, she did what she’s always done: listen and learn.

While completing her doctorate in athletic training this summer during quarantine, Watson worked with doctors and experts to better understand the coronaviru­s. When the league still was imagining what its bubble season would look like, Watson already was prepping her players. Take vitamins to keep a strong immune system. Wear a mask while working out to prepare for the inevitable mandates in Florida. Stay hydrated.

Watson continues to be part of the team’s pandemic patrol. During training, players said Watson would sometimes scold them for getting within six feet of one another off the court.

“Health and safety have been the No. 1 priority of mine and my Sparks players and our organizati­on,” Watson said. “Every single day, there’s no time to really relax on that part.”

Clearing that first hurdle is just the beginning of what Watson calls a “24-hour job.”

With many teams playing games less than 48 hours apart, athletic trainers are the key cog of the WNBA bubble. Efficient rest and recovery is more important than ever. Watson and her athletic training staff have set up shop at a villa in Bradenton.

Giant plastic tubs line the driveway as players sit in waist-high ice baths between games. Watson carefully pricks them with dry needles to promote blood flow. She applies suction cups to sore shoulders and soothes the muscles in their tired legs with stainless steel instrument­s. Mental recuperati­on is as necessary as physical recovery, so there might be a puzzle to solve.

“Court’s Corner” serves as both a treatment room and living room, where players, away from their homes and isolated from some family members, can gather with Watson at the center of their new family.

“She’s freaking amazing,” said forward Reshanda Gray, a fellow L.A. native who had heard stories about Watson. “I just feel so much safer, I feel so much more well prepared for the next game ... because she’s just so on top of her things.”

Building trust with players is Watson’s first priority. The team added six new players this season, and with no in-person training camp before the season, the initial meetings didn’t happen until everyone arrived in Florida in July. But Watson already had been working with players from afar. She follows them on social media and was calling and texting them during the summer to understand their injury histories.

“They know I’ll sacrifice whatever it takes to make them feel the best they can,” Watson said, “and they know it’s not just because they play for the Sparks, it’s because I care about them as human beings and mothers and women that are in our world right now facing so much adversity.”

Watson also mentors the next generation of athletic trainers through a sports medicine internship program aimed at high school or college students interested in working in the field. With Watson’s guidance, interns help at high schools like Westcheste­r that don’t necessaril­y have resources for full athletic training staffs. She shows them the ropes at the Drew League. After hundreds of hours of training, interns can work with the Sparks. Terrance Gaines, the team’s massage therapist, is a former Court’s Corner intern.

“I would have wanted to be in a program like this when I was coming up and I didn’t have that opportunit­y,” Watson said. “So to create it was a great joy.”

Although she’s internatio­nally renowned for her work, Watson, who was a teacher and athletic trainer at Westcheste­r for 13 years, still remembers working at an underserve­d high school. Supplies were short. Athletes couldn’t always afford surgeries. She learned the power of the community in those times when organizati­ons like the West Coast Sports Medicine Foundation rallied for donations and fundraiser­s.

Watson has been with the franchise through 10 playoff runs. She often thinks about the 2016 WNBA championsh­ip and what it would take to get that rush again.

“It’s not just about one person, it’s really about a team,” Watson said. “I’m very prideful of my sports medicine team being just as great as the team as a whole.”

Those on the court might argue Watson’s work is even more significan­t than that of the team. Guard Sydney Wiese called her a “complete rock star.” Coach Derek Fisher designated Watson as the team’s MVP before the season started.

“I don’t think that’s changing anytime soon,” Fisher said with a smile.

 ?? Courtesy of Sparks ?? COURTNEY WATSON, taping the ankle of a Sparks player, has been drawn to sports medicine since she was a three-sport athlete at Westcheste­r High.
Courtesy of Sparks COURTNEY WATSON, taping the ankle of a Sparks player, has been drawn to sports medicine since she was a three-sport athlete at Westcheste­r High.

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