New York Post

Vandersloo­t, Libs ready to run it back

- By ANDREW CRANE acrane@nypost.com

There was a time this offseason, Courtney Vandersloo­t admitted, when she worried. She knows how free agency — and those meetings — works. Just last year, the Liberty point guard navigated that and ended up leaving the only WNBA team she’d ever played for.

Vandersloo­t didn’t think she would end up in Brooklyn. “I don’t think very many people did,” she said. The same thing could’ve happened to Jonquel Jones, a former MVP with the Connecticu­t Sun and pivotal piece of the Liberty’s run to the WNBA Finals in 2023, when her contract expired.

But after Jones signed a two-year deal to remain with the Liberty, and Breanna Stewart received the core designatio­n and secured another one-year contract, their nucleus from that postseason run — where the Liberty fell to the Aces and hit the super-team obstacle that still looms in 2024 — remained intact. General manager Jonathan Kolb revamped their bench with Kennedy Burke, Leonie Fiebich and Ivana Dojkic, and that, Vandersloo­t said, usually “makes a good team a great team.”

But the first step was ensuring everything — or as much as possible, as the Liberty lost reserve forward Stefanie Dolson to the Mystics — stayed the same.

“I trusted in that [Jones] wanted to be a part of what we were building and obviously fell short with what the ultimate goal was,” Vandersloo­t said Wednesday after her visit to the Hospital for Special Surgery’s Lerner Children’s Pavilion, “but again, you just never know. But once she told me that she’s coming back, then I could sleep at night and everything’s good.”

So once Jones and Stewart inked their deals, the rest of the Liberty’s present started to settle into place. Vandersloo­t wasn’t playing overseas — where she’d carved out a separate career in Turkey, Russia and Hungry since turning pro — and instead trained.

And in instances such as Wednesday, Vandersloo­t represente­d the Liberty in a community where their footprint and recognitio­n has blossomed since their return to Barclays Center in 2021. Vandersloo­t, 35, shifted between inpatient and outpatient rooms at the Lerner Children’s Pavilion, posing for photos with the children and staff, and signing autographs. She gave an 8-yearold patient a shirt, learned about an upcoming trip and found out they shared the same birthday month.

Vandersloo­t understood what the patients and the families experience­d, with her mother’s battle with cancer making hospital visits hit “close to home for me,” she said. This time, and in other appearance­s since arriving in Brooklyn, Vandersloo­t gets spotted for her Liberty associatio­n.

And that, based on her past experience­s, wasn’t always the case.

“I come from an era that hasn’t always been like that in the WNBA,” Vandersloo­t said. “A lot of the time, you walk in a room, no one knows what the WNBA is.”

Last year, the Liberty rewarded record-setting attendance numbers with a franchise-best 32-8 regular and postseason victories over the Mystics and Sun.

It took time for the group to jell, especially because Vandersloo­t and Jones were injured during training camp. They were figuring things out “on the fly,” Vandersloo­t said, and in the playoffs, they learned to navigate their first run together, too.

“We went in there with not a lot of group experience,” Vandersloo­t said of last year’s WNBA Finals. “I mean, we had individual experience, but you could tell that on the final stage, that the Aces had been there before. We hadn’t. That’s what it came down to.”

 ?? Brandon Todd/New York Liberty ?? HELPING HAND: Liberty guard Courtney Vandersloo­t visits the Hospital for Special Surgery’s Lerner Children’s Pavilion on Wednesday.
Brandon Todd/New York Liberty HELPING HAND: Liberty guard Courtney Vandersloo­t visits the Hospital for Special Surgery’s Lerner Children’s Pavilion on Wednesday.

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