logo
New York and Minnesota still leading the way, both unbeaten heading into Commissioner's Cup play

New York and Minnesota still leading the way, both unbeaten heading into Commissioner's Cup play

Fox Sports2 days ago

Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Liberty and Minnesota Lynx picked up right where they left off last season when reaching the WNBA Finals.
Both teams have gone undefeated through their first seven games this year with the Lynx set to host Phoenix on Tuesday night in a Commissioner's Cup matchup.
The Liberty and Lynx faced off last season in the in-season tournament final with Minnesota coming away with the victory. New York got revenge, winning the WNBA championship for the first time in franchise history.
The two teams are each 7-0 this season, marking the latest that more than one franchise had been undefeated this long into the season since both the Lynx and Los Angeles Sparks started 2016 winning their first 11 games.
New York has dominated its opponents so far, averaging 91.9 points a game, and winning by nearly 23 points a contest. That includes a 48-point victory over Connecticut, the second-largest margin of victory in WNBA history.
Minnesota has been finding ways to win close contests. Before beating Golden State by 11 on Sunday, the Lynx had won their previous four games by a total of 18 points.
The Lynx and Liberty won't play in the regular season for a few more months with their four matchups coming in the span of a few weeks — the first of which is on July 30. Power poll rankings
New York led the way as the No. 1 team in the power poll again this week. Minnesota was right behind in second. The national voting panel chose Phoenix third and Atlanta fourth. The Dream moved up three places. Las Vegas, Seattle and Indiana were the next three. Washington, Golden State and Chicago followed. Los Angeles, Dallas and Connecticut rounded out the poll. Commissioner's Cup
The WNBA will play its annual in-season tournament over the next few weeks. Each team will play the other teams in their conference one time during that window. The West will have six games with the addition of expansion team Golden State. The East will play five. The teams with the best record in each conference will face off in the title game. The winning team receives a $500,000 cash prize pool to divvy up as well as each player on that squad will get $5,000 in cryptocurrency from Bitcoin. Player of the week
Allisha Gray of Atlanta earned Player of the Week honors for the second time in her career. The Dream guard, who also won the award in June 2023, averaged 26.5 points, 4.5 rebounds and 4 assists to help Atlanta win both its games last week on the road over Los Angeles and Seattle. Other players receiving consideration included A'ja Wilson of Las Vegas, Napheesa Collier of Minnesota and Sabrina Ionescu of New York. Game of the week
Indiana at Chicago, Saturday. Caitlin Clark may still be sidelined with a quad strain for this rematch between the Fever and Sky. The game will be broadcast on CBS in primetime, the first for the network in WNBA history.
___
AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah's extension shows Vikings ownership believes in the process
Kwesi Adofo-Mensah's extension shows Vikings ownership believes in the process

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah's extension shows Vikings ownership believes in the process

Secrets are buried in books like these. Flip through the pages of 'Building a Champion,' one of Hall of Fame coach Bill Walsh's manuals on doing what he and his famed San Francisco 49ers did, and you'll find plenty of gems. Perhaps the most relevant one, in the aftermath of Minnesota Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah signing a contract extension last week, focuses on the relationship between coaches and members of the front office. Advertisement Their alliance is always a delicate dance. Why? Their interests don't always align. Or, to use Walsh's words, 'each man's priorities can be diametrically opposed.' The general manager must be mindful of the overall economics and the long-term vision. The coach cares about winning — now. Threading the needle between those two worlds causes many situations to crumble. Toss in other factors, like an owner's potential meddling, the stress of losing, one key decision-maker craving public attention or credit over another, and the dynamics get messy quickly. Walsh walks through all of this. Essentially, he is explaining why so many teams fail. Eventually, he reaches two conclusions: 1) Teams hoping to sustain winning operate with continuity. And 2) a team's leadership must be willing to change when something doesn't work. Sounds easy, right? Stick with a plan, but be adaptable. It's that simple. If only ego and pressure didn't exist. Then it would be more common for teams like the Vikings to do what they've done. By extending Adofo-Mensah and keeping the partnership between him and head coach Kevin O'Connell intact, ownership demonstrated its level of commitment to attaining the elusive trophy. Spending on the roster remains flashy. New resources draw attention, too. But keeping the ship moving in the same direction, captained by the same people, is monumental. #Vikings Owner/President Mark Wilf on GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah's contract extension — Minnesota Vikings (@Vikings) May 30, 2025 'Discontinuity almost always ensures failure,' one former NFL general manager said last spring. 'You keep switching your leadership, and it's counterintuitive. It's not that if you keep the same people, you're necessarily going to be successful. But it's absolutely the case that if you switch people continuously, you will fail. At some point, you have to put your foot in the ground and say, 'I'm going to stick with somebody and stop tinkering, tinkering, tinkering.'' Advertisement Want some proof? OK, how many NFL teams have won 60 percent of their games since 2020? Seven. Who are they? The Chiefs, Bills, Packers, Ravens, Eagles, Buccaneers and Steelers. What do they have in common? Six of the seven have the same general manager now that they had in 2020, and the only one that doesn't (Pittsburgh) made a change when the previous GM retired. Additionally, only the Eagles and Bucs have different head coaches than the ones they began the decade with, and Tampa Bay replaced the former coach with his defensive coordinator. Quarterback play makes a huge difference in the results, but even that subject devolves into a chicken-and-egg conversation. Doesn't the QB have a better chance to thrive if his habitat isn't changing? Doesn't the team have a better chance of picking the correct QB if the team's leadership has experience with developing a consensus? To be clear, time together doesn't mean disagreements will never happen or that no one will ever have opposing views. If anything, the experience of working through those disputes provides a shorthand. Adofo-Mensah knows his scouts. He knows who grades players optimistically, who specializes in particular positions, who seeks to see their evaluations validated. The scouts also understand Adofo-Mensah and why he's going to see players through a historical lens. Adofo-Mensah recognizes the kinds of players defensive coordinator Brian Flores prefers. The coaching staff acknowledges that winning a Super Bowl means parting with the good (Kirk Cousins) in an attempt to find the great (a rookie quarterback offering loads of salary cap space). Working together leads to the types of free-agent classes that earned Adofo-Mensah more time. The Vikings nailed the Za'Darius Smith signing in 2022 and crushed the Byron Murphy Jr. acquisition in 2023. Last year, Minnesota hit the trifecta with Jonathan Greenard, Andrew Van Ginkel and Blake Cashman. The franchise's record is not spotless — looking at you, Marcus Davenport — but the right moves at the right times have created paths for two double-digit-win seasons in three years amid a salary-cap overhaul and quarterback transition. Advertisement Of course, the Vikings wouldn't have needed to be as reliant on free agency if they had more success in the draft. Misses in April cast a pall over Adofo-Mensah's resume. Twenty-three picks since 2022, and only one serious impact player: receiver Jordan Addison. The draft credentials would be more cause for concern, to go back to Walsh's original recipe, if it weren't for Adofo-Mensah's public reflections. 'When a mistake has been made, or a miscalculation has occurred, or a decision doesn't bring the proper results, ego prevents people from admitting error,' Walsh and co-author Glenn Dickey wrote. 'One of the major factors in successful leadership is the willingness to concede a miscalculation or mistake and change course immediately.' At least twice, Adofo-Mensah deferred to analogies to opaquely say he got too cute, tried to do too much. Privately, he has even admitted to focusing more recently on a player's intelligence, aware that O'Connell's and Flores' systems stress the mind. How these different draft priorities affect results in the next couple of seasons will determine whether Adofo-Mensah's early faults can be overcome. The most notable takeaway is that he has that opportunity. The final outcome will almost certainly hinge on J.J. McCarthy's trajectory, which is aimed as well as possible when ownership operates like this.

Guardians need one of their patented, dominant rotations, and they might soon have one
Guardians need one of their patented, dominant rotations, and they might soon have one

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Guardians need one of their patented, dominant rotations, and they might soon have one

NEW YORK — People have been asking about the vaunted Cleveland pitching factory. They've been wondering if it's still functioning, if grizzled coaches are still studying arm slots and crafting arsenals, if quarter zip-wearing data hounds are still clutching onto iPads that spit out spin rates and movement profiles. They've been concerned that the assembly line that, for years, churned out proficient big-league pitchers has ceased production. They've been worried that a once-buzzing workplace, the one envied by nearly every other team, has shuttered. Advertisement On Wednesday night, Luis Ortiz absorbed a few celebratory pounds to the chest from third baseman José Ramírez, handed manager Stephen Vogt the baseball and retreated to the visitors' dugout at Yankee Stadium. Along his way, he raised his cap to acknowledge his wife and 16 other friends and family members in attendance. He had completed another assignment in which his 98 mph heat zipped through the strike zone and his winding slider evaded bats. He took another step toward cementing himself as a force in a rotation that seems desperate to announce its presence. This is no revelatory declaration, but the Guardians' best chance to reach the postseason is to ride a robust rotation through the summer, the sort of roster backbone the organization became known for, but has lacked in recent years. This group has flashed hints of a forthcoming breakout. 'It's there, for sure,' said Tanner Bibee, the anchor of Cleveland's rotation. 'Everyone sees it.' A clicking rotation alleviates everything else. 'You can always win games (that way),' Bibee said. It preserves a top-heavy bullpen that the club has been careful not to overwork. It makes life easier on an underperforming lineup and buys the team brass time to figure out the ideal nine. So, do the Guardians have the horses to stampede their way to the postseason? They're certainly trending in the right direction. April: 4.84 ERA, 27th in MLB May: 3.60 ERA, 13th in MLB June: 1.45 ERA (in an admittedly tiny sample size of three games) Gavin Williams carried a no-hitter into the sixth inning against the Angels on Sunday, as he stymied hitters with an array of looping curveballs and careening cutters. Bibee conquered the Yankees on Tuesday until he made two seventh-inning mistakes. Ortiz silenced the Yankees for 5 2/3 innings on Wednesday. Advertisement Bibee was steaming after his start in the Bronx, which he admitted is a reflection of the lofty expectations he places upon himself. 'We've gone through one-third of the season,' he said, 'and I feel like a lot of us would say we have not pitched to the standard we hold ourselves to.' Perhaps that's changing. Ortiz seems like the perfect test subject. The Guardians acquired him in November, a classic case of the organization identifying a pitcher with traits they coveted, and others they thought they could enhance. 'I can't speak for other organizations,' said pitching coach Carl Willis, '(but) I think one of the things we do is we don't put guys in boxes. 'He's a right-hander. Here's his arsenal. Here's what he should do.' It's more of, 'This is how he moves. This is where his slot is.' (The key) is allowing the guy to be the best version of what he naturally does, with some adjustments, as opposed to trying to rebuild an entire building. 'They gain confidence in knowing the foundation is their way, but there may need to be a little bit of an adjustment somewhere along the chain that's going to help them be more efficient.' In Ortiz's case, his whiff rate, strikeout rate and ground-ball rate have soared since joining the Guardians. By no means does he resemble a polished, finished product, but his outing on Wednesday could be the right blueprint to examine. He induced 14 whiffs, topped out at 99.1 mph and threw more sliders than any other pitch. There were rocky days in spring training when Ortiz was yanked mid-inning and then returned to start the next. That carried into the regular season, but over his last five starts, Ortiz owns a 2.28 ERA. His walk rate remains a bit high — that's a fact for many of Cleveland's hurlers — but he has surrendered only two home runs in those five outings. Advertisement He spearheaded Cleveland's first shutout at Yankee Stadium since Aug. 9, 2014, a game started by Corey Kluber, who was zooming to the finish line of his first Cy Young campaign. Last season, the Guardians won in spite of their rotation. Outside of Bibee and Ben Lively — who underwent elbow reconstruction surgery on Wednesday in Dallas — the club didn't have much to cling to in its rotation. Carlos Carrasco finished third on the team in innings, Logan Allen and Triston McKenzie proved unreliable and Williams spent much of the season on the shelf. Remember when Spencer Howard started a game at Comerica Park? Yeah, that happened. By the time the playoffs arrived, the Guardians were leaning on a couple of midsummer pickups in Matthew Boyd, Alex Cobb and Bibee, who even pitched on short rest. To advance to the ALCS, they squeezed every ounce of juice out of their top four relievers. The formula could be different this year. 'It's been a really good few weeks,' Vogt said. … 'We're continuing to see these guys grow and learn and get better.' That should also take some pressure off the guy in line to rejoin the rotation in a few weeks, a guy with a Cy Young Award in his living room and a guy who was a member of some of those vintage Cleveland rotations. Shane Bieber, barring any setbacks, should be able to submit about a half-season's worth of starts, ample opportunity for him to shed any remaining rust following a 15-month gap between big-league outings. A healthy Bieber and a fully functioning Bibee, Williams and Ortiz would be formidable against any opposing lineup. It would also afford the team some flexibility (and depth) as Allen and Slade Cecconi attempt to prove up to the task, and with Joey Cantillo and Parker Messick waiting for their chance at Triple-A Columbus. On top of that, sprinkle in a bit of Kluber's expertise in his new role as special assistant, and maybe the pitching factory will be humming again this summer. (Top photo of Guardians starter Luis Ortiz pitching against the Yankees on Wednesday: Jim McIsaac / Getty Images)

This Week in Sports Trivia: June 5, 2025
This Week in Sports Trivia: June 5, 2025

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

This Week in Sports Trivia: June 5, 2025

For Tom Thibodeau, reaching the Eastern Conference finals was not enough. The coach discovered that harsh reality on Tuesday, when the New York Knicks showed him the door. Thibodeau was just the latest NBA coach with a track record of success to lose his job this season, joining Michael Malone (Nuggets) and Taylor Jenkins (Grizzlies). Thibodeau's firing was even surprising enough that Rick Carlisle, whose Indiana Pacers ended the Knicks' season, said he thought the news was 'one of those fake AI things.' It was all too real. Advertisement Still, the sports world kept on spinning this week, and the news wasn't all negative, with the Pacers taking on the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals, and the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers locking horns in the Stanley Cup Final. Heck, even the Colorado Rockies, who entered the week with a 9-50 record, went on a heater of sorts. All of that is included in our latest news quiz, so we hope you've been paying attention. Good luck, and if you have a moment, you should play our daily Connections: Sports Edition, too! (Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; top photos: Emilee Chinn, Sarah Stier, William Purnell, Megan Briggs, Justin Setterfield / Getty Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store