A national panel of 60 sportswriters and broadcasters vote on the WNBA's annual regular-season awards, including Rookie of ...
And female professionals are speaking out. Angel McCoughtry, who played thirteen seasons in the WNBA, has inspired hundreds if not thousands of women and girls. That’s due to her groundbreaking ...
With the league's top scoring average (21.5 ppg) for the second consecutive season, Atlanta's McCoughtry led the Dream all the way to the WNBA Finals. Third in the league in regular-season scoring ...
“I called my agent, I called the agency, I called ESPN and I [thought] just tell them the truth. My phone wasn’t hacked, it wasn’t a prank, it was me being a healthy, active male.
The ESPN networks’ slate of 16 regular-season ... The No. 1 picks: Atlanta’s Angel McCoughtry (2009), Connecticut’s Chiney Ogwumike (2014), Las Vegas’ Kelsey Plum (2017) and A’ja Wilson ...
behind Angel McCoughtry (No. 1 in 2009) and Asia Durr (No. 2 in 2019). Engstler got emotional in her interview with ESPN's Holly Rowe immediately after being drafted, talking about the support she ...
These athletes are all greats of their respective games, but none of them has a professional championship in their sport.
All-WNBA Second Team: Seimone Augustus (MIN), Tamika Catchings (IND), Tina Charles (CON), Elena Delle Donne (CHI), Angel McCoughtry (ATL ... the WNBA and ESPN announced an extension of their ...
Key players like Angel McCoughtry, Shoni Schimmel, Finals MVP Betty Lennox, and Brazilian star shooting guard Izi Castro Marques played vital roles in building the team’s early success ...
During their explanation for the Rookie of the Year award, ESPN posted their thoughts on Chicago Sky rookie Angel Reese. She was listed as the runner-up, behind Indiana Fever rookie Caitlin Clark.
ESPN's Alexa Philippou ... But their paths diverged from there. The Dream landed Angel McCoughtry by winning the 2009 draft lottery and improved by 14 wins in Year 2, making the playoffs.