Nneka Ogwumike's brutally honest take on Storm's loss to Mystics
Seattle Storm forward Nneka Ogwumike said the team must improve its consistency after a 69-58 loss to the Washington Mystics on Saturday night. Ogwumike, who scored 18 points in the first half but was held scoreless after halftime, highlighted the Storm's need for stronger starts and sustained effort throughout games.
'We got to do better starting things off, we got to do better sustaining things,' Ogwumike said in a postgame press conference, via the Seattle Storm's YouTube channel. 'I think a big takeaway is that we have some strength off the bench.'
Seattle fell into a deep hole early in the third quarter, going over five minutes without scoring. The Mystics capitalized with a 10-0 run, eventually building a 19-point lead. A late rally led by reserves Dominique Malonga, Erica Wheeler, Victoria Vivians and others helped the Storm trim the deficit to four with just over five minutes remaining, but Washington closed on a 6-0 run to seal the win.
'We came out in the second half, and the first unit just was not getting it done. Today our bench mob showed some serious resilience,' Ogwumike said.
Storm coach Noelle Quinn praised the bench for its energy and defense during the fourth-quarter run.
'I thought that unit gave us what we needed in that moment,' Quinn said, per Zachary Ward of Swish Appeal. 'They fought hard to hold the Mystics to a nine-point quarter.'
Despite the comeback effort, Seattle struggled on both ends for much of the game, shooting just 33% from the field and making only five of 21 attempts from three-point range. The Storm were also outrebounded 44-28.
The loss dropped Seattle to 15-11 on the season, continuing a pattern of alternating wins and losses since the All-Star break. The team will look to regroup when it travels to face the Connecticut Sun on Monday. The Mystics, now 12-12, host the Phoenix Mercury on Sunday.
Information from the Associated Press contributed to this article.
Related: Storm No. 2 pick Dominique Malonga stuffs stat sheet in historic outing
Related: Sue Bird's franchise record falls as Storm drub Sky
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Brent Headrick escapes a bases-loaded jam
Brent Headrick strikes out Luke Keaschall to escape a bases-loaded jam and end the top of the 9th inning against the Twins
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Shohei Ohtani fans Trout with 101 mph fastball while pitching into the 5th in return to Big A mound
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Shohei Ohtani returned to the Angel Stadium mound with 4 1/3 innings of five-hit, four-run ball for the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night in his first pitching appearance in Anaheim since he left the Los Angeles Angels nearly two years ago. Ohtani put on a two-way show for his old home crowd with seven strikeouts. He fanned Mike Trout twice, getting his friend and fellow MVP the second time with his fastest pitch of the night — a 101 mph fastball in the fourth inning. Ohtani also staked himself to an early lead by tripling and scoring as the Dodgers' leadoff hitter before he even took the mound, entertaining Angels fans with the same inimitable feats he accomplished regularly during his first six major league seasons with their club. Ohtani's mound start was his longest since he returned to pitching two months ago, but he didn't finish strong. He gave up three consecutive one-out hits in the fifth and left after Zach Neto's two-run double trimmed the Dodgers' lead to 5-4. Anthony Banda still escaped the jam, but only after the Angels loaded the bases. Ohtani also gave up a homer to Taylor Ward during the Angels' two-run second inning. He looked sharp in the next two innings before getting chased by two singles and Neto's drive. Ohtani is still beloved in Anaheim by fans who mostly couldn't blame him for leaving a team that could never assemble a winning lineup around him and Trout during six consecutive losing seasons. The three-time MVP — two of those trophies claimed with the Angels — has received cheers whenever he returns to the Big A, although that's also because much of the crowd wears Dodger Blue for these Freeway Series rivalry games. The fans were locked in on the main event in this showdown: After Trout and Ohtani acknowledged each other with slight nods and smirks, Ohtani finished his 1-2-3 first inning by throwing five straight fastballs to Trout before striking him out looking with a sweeper. The MVP ex-teammates hadn't faced each other since Ohtani famously struck out Trout in Tokyo — with the same pitch — to end the 2023 World Baseball Classic. Ohtani was even meaner to Trout in their second meeting, starting him out with a 73 mph curve before eventually fanning him with that blazing fastball in the low outside corner. Outside of Trout, Ohtani saw plenty of familiar faces Wednesday: Seven of the nine hitters in the Angels' starting lineup played with him in Anaheim. But Ohtani hadn't been on the mound at the Big A since Aug. 23, 2023, when he abruptly left a start against Cincinnati in the second inning with elbow pain later revealed to be a torn ligament. The resulting surgery kept him off the mound entirely in 2024 after he signed his 10-year, $700 million contract with the Dodgers. Ohtani returned to pitching two months ago, and the Dodgers have gradually built up his innings while maintaining his everyday role as their DH and leadoff hitter. Before his mound return, Ohtani homered in each of the first two games of this series — although he also lined into a triple play Tuesday. After getting loud pregame cheers, Ohtani began by driving a 2-2 pitch from Kyle Hendricks into deep right for a triple, and he quickly scored on Betts' single. Will Smith added his 15th homer a few minutes later to stake his pitcher to a 3-0 lead. Ward blasted a 97 mph fastball from Ohtani to right for his 29th homer, just the second allowed by Ohtani this season. Yoán Moncada then doubled and scored on two flyouts. Ohtani struck out at the plate in the second inning, but he drew a walk in the fourth, loading the bases and chasing Hendricks. Angels reliever Andrew Chafin struck out Ohtani with a slider when the slugger came up again in the sixth. ___ AP MLB:
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Joe Ryan throws 6 2/3 innings in Twins' 4-1 victory over the Yankees
NEW YORK (AP) — Joe Ryan allowed a run and four hits in 6 2/3 innings and the Minnesota Twins beat the Yankees 4-1 on Wednesday night, breaking a nine-game losing streak to New York. Ryan (12-5) allowed only a homer to Cody Bellinger in the game that was delayed at the start for 1 hour, 52, minutes because of rain. The right-hander struck out seven, walked two and threw his hardest pitch of the season when he struck out Aaron Judge on a 97.7 mph fastball in the first. After Bellinger homered, Ryan struck out the next four hitters and allowed two baserunners the rest of the way. Kody Clemens hit a two-run double and Royce Lewis added an RBI double in Minnesota's three-run sixth off Yerry De Los Santos (0-1) and Mark Leiter Jr. Rookie Luke Keaschall had an RBI groundout as the Twins beat the Yankees for the first time since April 26, 2023. Minnesota ended its skid to New York after executive chair Joe Pohlad announced his family will remain the principal owner and add two new investment groups instead. Kody Funderburk struck out Austin Wells to end the seventh, and Justin Topa had a six-out save to finish the five-hitter. New York rookie Cam Schlitter allowed one run and three hits in 5 1/3 innings. The hard-throwing righty retired the first nine hitters until Trevor Larnach walked ahead of a double by Byron Buxton. Key Moment Infield hits by Buxton and Keaschall started Minnesota's rally. Clemens followed with a two-strike double, took third when center fielder Trent Grisham bobbled the ball and scored on the Lewis double. Key Stat Clemens was hitless in his previous 18 at-bats before his double. Up Next Minnesota RHP Bailey Ober (4-7, 5.16 ERA) opposes Detroit RHP Tarik Skubal (11-3, 2.35) at home Thursday night. New York RHP Luis Gil (0-1, 7.27) opposes RHP Andre Pallante (6-9, 4.95) in the opener of a three-game series at St. Louis on Friday night. ___ AP MLB: