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Tag: Phoenix Mercury

  • WNBA star Alyssa Thomas joins new Project B league, promising higher salaries and global competition

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    WNBA MVP finalist Alyssa Thomas on Tuesday became the second player to join Project B, the new women’s basketball league that is expected to begin in Europe and Asia in November 2026.

    The Phoenix Mercury star announced her decision on social media a week after Nneka Ogwumike told The Associated Press that she also would play in the new league offering players high salaries and an equity stake.

    “Alyssa is the kind of player and person you build around,” Project B’s chief basketball officer, Alana Beard, told the AP. “Her leadership, competitiveness and professionalism elevate everyone around her. As one of the most respected players in the world, she represents the new era of player partnership and global competition that Project B stands for.”

    Thomas led the Phoenix Mercury to the WNBA Finals this past season before the team lost to the Las Vegas Aces in four games. The 6-foot-2 forward spent her first 11 seasons with the Connecticut Sun, twice leading them to the WNBA Finals while earning five All-Star nods.

    The 33-year-old has spent previous offseasons playing overseas before joining Unrivaled for its inaugural season last year. Thomas will be back this January in the 3-on-3 league that also features many top WNBA players. Project B and Unrivaled will have overlapping dates going forward.

    “We’re confident with what we’ve built in collaboration with our athletes, partners and investors,” Unrivaled president Alex Bazzell said in a statement. “We remain consistent in our approach to pay players competitively, provide a meaningful stake in the business and keep them home year-round.”

    Project B will have 66 players divided into six teams. Each player will receive a larger salary than those currently offered by the WNBA. They also are expected to be higher than those at Unrivaled.

    While the financial specifics haven’t been disclosed, the potential of more lucrative compensation comes at an important moment for women’s professional basketball. As interest in the sport has soared in recent years, the WNBA and players union are locked in tense negotiations over a new collective bargaining agreement, with much of the dispute centered on salary and revenue sharing.

    Project B plans to play the inaugural season through April 2027. That would not interfere with the typical WNBA calendar.

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    AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports

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  • Las Vegas Aces win 2025 WNBA championship following sweep of Phoenix Mercury

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    (CNN) — Three of a kind! The Las Vegas Aces can now call themselves the WNBA’s latest dynasty.

    The Aces secured the 2025 WNBA championship following a 97-86 win over the Phoenix Mercury Friday to sweep the Finals.

    It is Las Vegas’ third title in four seasons and were led by no other than superstar A’ja Wilson.

    The 29-year-old Wilson finished with 31 points and nine rebounds to add another ring to her collection of accolades which include being named MVP for a record-breaking fourth time this season.

    It wasn’t the only history Wilson made.

    She was named Finals MVP for the second time in her career, and has now become the first player in WNBA history to win MVP, FMVP and Defensive Player of the Year in the same season.

    An emotional Wilson shared an embrace with her partner, Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo, following the win.

    “For us to be able to celebrate this, it’s truly special,” Wilson told ESPN on making history. “We worked our butts off to get to this point. And now its time to have some fun. I wish I could take this credit but this is God’s work. This ain’t got nothing to do with me. This is not about X’s and O’s. This is from what’s inside.”

    Just like the story in Game 3 a few days ago, it wasn’t an easy road to victory for Las Vegas.

    Despite a 16-point deficit going into halftime, the Mercury have proven in these Finals that no one can ever count them out.

    Phoenix clawed their way back into the game in the third quarter, cutting the Aces lead to just 12 behind forward Kahleah Copper scoring 12 of her 30 points in the period.

    Late in the third, it all came to a crashing halt as Mercury head coach Nate Tibbetts was ejected after being issued a double technical for arguing a foul call on guard Monique Akoa Makani.

    The second-year coach appeared to be confused after the foul call before exiting the court and heading into the locker room tunnel.

    The ejection grew the ire of Copper.

    “I think the refs aren’t doing a good job tonight, I’m sorry,” Copper told ESPN during an in-game interview. “But we’ve just got to keep our heads.”

    The Mercury kept up their resilience throughout the fourth quarter, turning it into a six-point game at one point but Las Vegas proved to be too much.

    Copper would foul out of the game late in the fourth quarter just as the Aces appeared to have all but wrapped up the victory.

    The Aces have now won their third title in four seasons. Credit: Stephen Gosling/NBAE / Getty Images via CNN Newsource

    As the buzzer sounded and Aces players and coaches rushed onto the Mortgage Matchup Center floor to celebrate the win, guard Chelsea Gray commended her team for getting through the adversity they faced all season.

    “This team has been through hell and back,” an emotional Gray told ESPN after the game before hugging head coach Becky Hammon. “What a run. Everyone stepped up. Everybody. We got the best player in the world in A’ja Wilson. … We’re champions bro.”

    The start of the 2025 season was a grueling one for the Aces, starting out 14-14 before winning their last 16 regular season games.

    As WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert was booed loudly while addressing the Phoenix crowd, it was Aces and NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis who got to hoist the WNBA championship trophy first.

    A fiery way to end the 2025 WNBA Finals

    The loss is a familiar feeling for Phoenix, who have now lost in the WNBA Finals for the second time in five years.

    Tibbetts didn’t mince words about his ejection and the refereeing.

    “To me, that’s embarrassing. I feel bad that I was tossed. Been around this game a long time. I think it’s one of the weakest double technicals ever,” Tibbetts told reporters after the game. “I didn’t even know I got the second one, to be completely honest. I don’t understand it.”

    Tibbetts added he wasn’t trying to get himself ejected.

    “We’re playing for our playoff lives. Most coaches when they get tossed, you’re doing it on purpose. That was not my intention at all,” he added. “There’s been issues with the officiating all year. I have to look at it. I feel like I didn’t deserve that.”

    When asked about her comments to ESPN during the game, Copper stopped short of expanding on her feelings.

    “It’s cool. It’s done. We don’t even got to talk about that. It’s cool. It’s done,” Copper said.

    Phoenix has won three championships in their franchise history, the last coming in 2014. The team came into Friday’s win-or-go-home game shorthanded after forward Satou Sabally sustained a concussion late in Game 3 and suffered another blow when forward Alyssa Thomas appeared to injure her shoulder before halftime.

    She returned in the second half, but it was apparent the injury bothered her the rest of the way.

    Thomas told reporters her shoulder was “good” and said she was proud of the way her team responded all season.

    “I think this team just showed what we’re about. It’s a game I don’t think I ever been a part of like that, but super proud of how we fought, continued to play through everything. It’s been a great season. No one expected us to even be here,” Thomas said.

    “Of course it didn’t go the way that we want it to end, but we have a lot to build on.”

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    Jacob Lev and CNN

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  • Minnesota Lynx fall to Phoenix Mercury 84-76 in Game 3 of WNBA semifinals

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    Sylvia Fowles, Maya Moore inducted into Naismith Hall of Fame



    Sylvia Fowles, Maya Moore inducted into Naismith Hall of Fame

    02:02

    The top-seeded Minnesota Lynx were beaten by the Mercury 84-76 in Game 3 on Friday night, leaving Phoenix in control of their WNBA playoff semifinals series.

    Satou Sabally scored 23 points for the Mercury in the game — including 15 in a stellar fourth quarter.

    Phoenix has a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five series and can reach the Finals on Sunday with a win in Game 4 in Phoenix.

    Sabally hit a 3-pointer to give the Mercury a 78-76 lead with 3:05 remaining and added two free throws with 2:01 left to push the advantage to 80-76. Alyssa Thomas had a steal and layup with 21.8 seconds left that sealed the win.

    A furious Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve was ejected following the layup after getting her second technical foul.

    Minnesota Lynx v Phoenix Mercury - Game Three

    PHOENIX, ARIZONA – SEPTEMBER 26: Head coach Cheryl Reeve of the Minnesota Lynx is restrained by coaches after being ejected during the second half of Game Three of the 2025 WNBA Playoffs semifinals against the Phoenix Mercury at PHX Arena on September 26, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona.

    Christian Petersen / Getty Images


    Napheesa Collier also got hurt on the play, rolling her ankle. She had to be helped to the locker room.

    Thomas and Kahleah Copper both scored 21 points, highlighting a balanced Mercury offense. It was a tight game throughout with 15 lead changes.

    Minnesota was led by Natisha Hiedeman’s 19 points off the bench. Collier added 17 points on 8 of 15 shooting while Courtney Williams added 14.

    Minnesota trailed by four at halftime but rallied for a 67-63 lead heading into the fourth quarter. The 5-foot-8 Heideman gave the Lynx a big boost in the final five minutes of the third, scoring eight points.

    The Mercury bounced back from an early deficit, shooting 54.3 % from the field in the first half to take a 48-44 halftime lead. Copper had 17 points before the break on 8 of 9 shooting while Thomas added 11 points and 5 rebounds. Minnesota was led by Collier’s 13 points.

    The Mercury were riding high coming into Game 3 after a 20-point comeback win in Tuesday’s Game 2 that evened the series. It was tied for the third-largest comeback in WNBA playoff history.

    Note: The above video first aired on Sept. 9, 2025

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    CBS Minnesota

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  • Mercury beat Lynx 89-83 in OT and even WNBA semifinal series

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    Minnesota breaks with federal guidance on COVID vaccines, and more headlines



    Minnesota breaks with federal guidance on COVID vaccines, and more headlines

    06:02

    Satou Sabally scored 11 of her 24 points in the fourth quarter and Alyssa Thomas had 19 points and 13 assists to help the Phoenix Mercury erase a 20-point deficit and beat the Minnesota Lynx 89-83 in overtime on Tuesday night, tying the WNBA semifinal series at one game apiece.

    Sami Whitcomb’s 3-pointer from the wing with 4 seconds left in regulation evened the game at 79 after Thomas kept alive the possession following Whitcomb’s airballed 3 from the top of the key, and Napheesa Collier’s 18-footer for the win fell short at the buzzer to force extra time.

    Thomas, who had a triple-double in the decisive Game 3 victory in the first round that ousted defending champion New York, grabbed eight rebounds and ignited the rally with her intensity after a lackluster first half. Her three-point play with 3:32 left in the fourth quarter ended a stretch of 33:28 during which the top-seeded Lynx had the lead.

    Collier scored 24 points on her 29th birthday, Kayla McBride had 21 points and Courtney Williams added 20 points, nine assists, seven rebounds and three steals for the Lynx, whose bench was outscored 25-3.

    The Mercury, who played their fourth game in seven days, will host Game 3 of the best-of-five series on Friday night.

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    CBS Minnesota

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  • Artist Antoinette Cauley discusses how Phoenix inspires her work

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    Rising with the downtown Phoenix skyline, a 100-foot-tall, vibrantly colorful mural of author James Baldwin gazes out over the city. Created by native Phoenician Antoinette Cauley for the Ten-O-One Building in 2020, at the height of a year marked by the murder of George Floyd, racial justice protests, the COVID-19 pandemic and Trump’s first impeachment, the mural is a permanent reminder of resilience in the face of injustice…

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    Royal Young

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  • How to Watch Mercury vs Liberty: Live Stream WNBA Playoffs, Round 1, Game 2, TV Channel

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