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Sky players voice confidence in new team identity under Teresa Weatherspoon: 'She's allowing us to be ourselves'

Julia Poe, Chicago Tribune on

Published in Basketball

CHICAGO — There’s just one week until Teresa Weatherspoon makes her mark on the WNBA — for the second time in her Hall of Fame career.

The Chicago Sky’s new head coach will make her debut at the helm of a professional team next week with the Sky’s season opener against the Dallas Wings. It’s a fresh start for the Sky and for Weatherspoon, offering excitement and uncertainty for fans after a rocky 2023 season.

Throughout media day on Wednesday, her players reiterated the same sentiment: In Weatherspoon, the Sky have found a coach who only needed a few weeks of preseason to earn buy-in across her roster.

“She really gets to know each and every one of us so she knows how to coach us,” guard Dana Evans said. “That’s something that I really like because I don’t think you can coach everyone the same. Everybody’s different. She just genuinely cares about you so we’re just gonna go hard for her because we want this to be a great first year for her.”

This will be a transitional season for the Sky — and Weatherspoon has embraced that fact since she took the job last fall.

This is the first year the team’s head coach is not also the general manager. New GM Jeff Pagliocca was hired in October just a few weeks after Weatherspoon. It’s also a season of new beginnings after the team traded star Kahleah Copper to the Phoenix Mercury to acquire significant draft stock, which paid off with the selection of Kamilla Cardoso and Angel Reese.

 

Weatherspoon will be tasked with forging a new identity for the Sky while also jelling a team packed with young players.

“We’re just trying to play together,” Weatherspoon said. “We’re just trying to play the game the right way — share the ball, play with each other, play for each other and have fun doing it. Of course we want to be great on the defensive side of the ball and we want to execute on the offensive side of the ball, but we want to have fun doing it by playing together.”

Weatherspoon’s strength as a coach lies in player development, which was the focus of her prior role as an NBA assistant coach with the New Orleans Pelicans. Ahead of Tuesday’s preseason game, she spent warmups issuing directives and adjustments to veterans and rookies alike, guiding frontcourt players Isabelle Harrison, Angel Reese and Elizabeth Williams through their midrange jump shots while offering critiques.

This ability to embrace and uplift the individuality of each player is a key for Weatherspoon as a coach, both in Chicago and in the WNBA at large.

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