Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Williams back with the Sun after two years with Atlanta

- By Maggie Vanoni maggie.vanoni @hearstmedi­act.com

UNCASVILLE — Jonquel Jones knew the Connecticu­t Sun was missing something.

The 2021 WNBA MVP saw that her team lacked power and energy in the backcourt. Connecticu­t needed a sharp, skilled presence to help feed her the ball and create plays in clutch moments.

Jones, DeWanna Bonner and Alyssa Thomas all knew who their team needed. And shortly after the 2021 season ended in October, Sun head coach Curt Miller also knew.

In February, it was official: Courtney Williams would return to the Sun.

“I knew they were interested, not even trying to sound all cocky, but I feel like I’m what this team was missing,” Williams said after Connecticu­t’s training camp practice on Monday. “I felt like just coming back in, it felt natural. Curt gave me a phone call, JJ, DB, AT, they were like, ‘You ready to come back home?’ and I was like, ‘Say less. I’m coming.’ ”

Connecticu­t signed Williams during the offseason to lead its backcourt and push the franchise one step closer in its pursuit of winning title No. 1 after falling in the playoff semifinals the past two seasons. To Miller and his players, Williams — who played for the Sun from 2016 to 2020 — was clearly the player they needed because of her familiarit­y with Connecticu­t’s system, players, and coaches.

The Sun also missed her contagious energy and unique skill set.

“Obviously really enjoyed the first four years with Courtney, (she) was an integral part of our growth and building what we think is very special now,” Miller said Tuesday. “On top of it, (she’s) just an elite human. She’s just a fantastic person, energy is contagious.

“She’s one of the few players that can just go create her own basket and we’ve missed that the last two years without her. … She’s a dynamic player, she’s the package. I really believe in her as a person and with the basketball, we just know what we’re gonna get.”

Williams’ history with the Sun began in June 2016.

After being drafted earlier that spring as the eighth overall pick by Phoenix, she was traded to Connecticu­t after six appearance­s with the Mercury. Williams left South Florida as the program’s No. 2 all-time scorer with 2,304 career points and was No. 3 on its all-time career rebounds list with 931, yet she totaled just three points and seven rebounds with the Mercury in 25 total minutes.

She joined a rookie class in Connecticu­t that also featured Jones, Rachel Banham and UConn’s Morgan Tuck. Williams averaged 6.2 points, 1.2 assists and 3.0

rebounds in 14.0 minutes per game her first year with the Sun.

“Just a dynamic collegiate scorer, coming out,” Miller said of adding Williams in 2016. “We had gotten into the season, we were looking for a spark and she was on the bench as a rookie with a very veteran team in Phoenix, barely playing. So, she was a person that we targeted that we thought we could go after and really bring something to the table. It was just a perfect match for us.”

It didn’t take long for her to become an integral part of the Sun’s rotation. Over the next three seasons, she started 91 out of 98 games. In 2018, she set the franchise’s record with 15 made field goals while scoring the most points in regulation (34). A year later, she helped the Sun reach the playoff finals for the first time since 2005, averaging 17.9 points, 5.8 rebounds and 4.4. assists in the postseason.

But Williams was traded to Atlanta before the 2020 season as part of a multiteam deal with Connecticu­t and Phoenix which saw Briann January joining the Sun from the Mercury.

Williams start in Atlanta was positive. She led all guards in the league in 2020 with 7.2 rebounds per game and started in 14 of the Dream’s 20 games.

Last season, Williams earned her first WNBA All-Star nod. She led the league in the regular season in total minutes played (1,101) and was first among all guards with 219 total rebounds. She reached the the 2,000-career points milestone after leading Atlanta with 16.5 points, 6.8 rebounds and 4.0 assists. Then came the offseason. While Williams was an unrestrict­ed free agent following the 2021 season, ESPN reported Atlanta did not want to resign the Georgia native after a video surfaced of her and former Dream teammate Crystal

Bradford involved in a physical altercatio­n outside a club in Atlanta in May.

In November, a month after the video circulated on social media, the WNBA suspended both Williams and Bradford heading into the 2022 season for violating the league’s health and safety protocols. Per the suspension, Williams will sit out Connecticu­t’s first two games of the season.

Williams said Jones and Miller were some of the first people to reach out to her following the news of the video and of her suspension.

“Man, it was love, it was really love,” she said. “It meant so much to me because you know how you get on Twitter and there be all this hating and everybody got everything to say, who never even have a conversati­on with you, right? So it felt good to know the people who actually know me, have been in my energy before, hitting my line and letting me know like, ‘You good, we all make mistakes. Life goes on. You’re gonna be alright.’ ”

Jones said she reached out because she knew Williams deserved better than the negativity she was getting on social media.

“First things first, she’s a friend,” Jones said. “When you know someone’s heart and you know their character, you check on them. Sometimes questionab­le things happen. … All of us have done something that we probably shouldn’t have been doing. But for her, it was blasted on social media, someone reported it and it came out.

“When you think about the things that you’ve done and the possibilit­ies of those things being out there you kinda have a little more empathy for a person in that situation. But ultimately, I care about her and that’s my friend.”

 ?? Nick Wass / Associated Press ?? Connecticu­t Sun guard Courtney Williams gestures after she made a basket in the second half of Game 2 of the WNBA Finals against the Washington Mystics in 2019.
Nick Wass / Associated Press Connecticu­t Sun guard Courtney Williams gestures after she made a basket in the second half of Game 2 of the WNBA Finals against the Washington Mystics in 2019.

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