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Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Napheesa Collier Had 1-Word for Holly Rowe on Minnesota Lynx's Season Goals After Win vs. Liberty
Napheesa Collier Had 1-Word for Holly Rowe on Minnesota Lynx's Season Goals After Win vs. Liberty originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Minnesota Lynx scored one of the biggest wins of the 2025 WNBA season on Wednesday night as they took down the 2024 WNBA champion New York Liberty at the Target Center in Minneapolis. The win cemented the Lynx as a team to watch heading down the stretch of the season with the 2025 Playoffs scheduled to begin on Sunday, September 14. Wednesday's game included a big performance from Lynx forward Napheesa Collier, who dueled with Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu all evening, helping her team to pull out the win. Collier finished with 30 points in a 100-93 win, one fewer than Ionescu. She was asked what her goals for the rest of the season are by veteran ESPN reporter Holly Rowe, and did not hesitate to give a clear one-word answer. "What's the goal, Phee?" Rowe asked. "Championship," the Lynx star forward replied. Collier's Lynx have now won five of their last seven games heading into Saturday's matchup on the road against A'ja Wilson and the Las Vegas Aces, a game that will be televised on ABC and ESPN+. The game is scheduled for 3 p.m. ET and will give the 23-5 Lynx a chance to continue their dominance over another talented team as they build toward a potential championship story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 31, 2025, where it first appeared.


New York Times
7 minutes ago
- New York Times
Sex toy thrown onto WNBA court for second time in 3 days, briefly stopping game
Three days after a WNBA game was stopped after a fan tossed a sex toy onto the court, it happened again. The bright green object was thrown onto the court at Wintrust Arena during a contest between the Golden State Valkyries and the Chicago Sky on Friday, forcing referees to stop play. The stoppage happened midway through the third quarter after Valkyries guard Kate Martin launched and missed a deep 3-pointer. Officials stopped play immediately after the toy flew onto the court along the baseline underneath the Sky's basket. Referee Blanca Burns quickly kicked it off the floor before a Sky equipment staffer removed it. Advertisement Sky forward Elizabeth Williams expressed her frustration with the incident. 'I think it's super disrespectful. I don't get it, I don't really get the point of it,' Williams said during a postgame news conference after Chicago fell to Golden State 73-66. 'It's really immature. Whoever is doing it just needs to grow up.' A similar occurrence took place on Tuesday night while a neon green sex toy was tossed onto the floor in a game between the Valkyries and the Atlanta Dream at the Chase Center in San Francisco. That incident happened during the fourth quarter, with less than a minute left on the clock, and television cameras caught the toy before a laughing security guard removed it with a towel.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sky-Valkyries game interrupted by green sex toy thrown on court, marking second incident in WNBA this week
On Friday, the Golden State Valkyries' 73-66 away win over the Chicago Sky was interrupted for an unusual reason. During the third quarter, the game was stopped after a bright green sex toy that was thrown on the court. It's the second time in four days that a WNBA game has been halted because of the issue. A similar sex toy was thrown onto the court in Atlanta on Tuesday, also during a Valkyries away game. That incident took place in the final minute of Golden State's narrow 77-75 win over the Atlanta Dream. "It's super disrespectful," Chicago center Elizabeth Williams said after Friday's game, via the Chicago Tribune. "I don't really get the point of it. It's really immature. Whoever is doing it needs to grow up." With it becoming a repeat occurrence, other WNBA players are starting to sound off on the issue. Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham took to X on Friday to speak on the safety risks. In Tuesday's incident, the sex toy landed near the free throw line while both teams were in play, before bouncing to the sideline. (Friday's landed past the baseline.) "You're going to hurt one of us," Cunningham wrote. Other players took a slightly more humorous tone to the odd interruption. The WNBA has yet to comment on the incidents, while the Sky declined to comment at the time, per the Tribune. Though unusual in the WNBA, sex toys have found their way into sports before. The Buffalo Bills have famously had a tradition of throwing them when they play the New England Patriots, and revived the tradition in 2022. But it's unlikely that the family-friendly WNBA will be happy with this turn of events, which raises questions both of player safety and arena security. It's unclear how the league will respond — or if the toys will keep flying in the meantime.