Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Thoughts On Making a WNBA Roster Spring 2016

It is training camp time for the 12 WNBA teams. That means rosters currently at  19-21 players will need to be pared down to 12 by opening night in mid May.
I'm not a basketball coach and I would not relish the job of telling a rookie right out of college or a veteran player that I had cut them from the roster.
I imagine there is a lot of competition in the camps, everyone trying to show they have what it takes to propel the team forward to victory in games, a winning season, the playoffs and a championship.
Let's look at the Atlanta Dream, a team I like because my mom is from Louisville and my wife's favorite player is Shoni Shimmel.
Here is the roster right now. There is a good mix of experience and youth here with six players with more than 5 years in the league, including the leagues most seasoned player DMJ with 18 years and six rookies and eight players with less than two years in the league. How does a coach decide where to make the cut?
2016 Atlanta Dream Roster (as of April 20, 2016)

No.     Player  Pos     Ht.     Wt.     Birth Date      Exp     From
10      Matee Ajavon    G       5-8     160     5/7/86  8       Rutgers
45      Kara Braxton    C       6-6     224     2/18/83 10      Georgia
11      Cierra Burdick  F       6-2     162     9/30/93 1       Tennessee
8       Carla Cortijo   G       5-8     135     7/21/87 1       Texas
12      Damiris Dantas  F       6-3     196     11/17/92        2       Brazil
21      Reshanda Gray   F       6-2     192     6/1/93  1       California
15      Tiffany Hayes   G       5-10    155     9/20/89 4       Connecticut
5       Roneeka Hodges  G       5-11    165     7/19/82 11      Florida St.
14      Rachel Hollivay C       6-4     210     10/24/93        R       Rutgers
32      Bria Holmes     G       6-1     170     4/19/94 R       West Virginia
2       Niya Johnson    G       5-8     160     10/14/93        R       Baylor
20      Sancho Lyttle   F       6-4     175     9/20/83 11      Houston
35      Angel McCoughtry        G/F     6-1     160     9/10/86 7       Louisville
22      Ariel Massengale        G       5-7     149     6/10/93 R       Tennessee
1       DeLisha Milton-Jones    F/C     6-1     185     9/11/74 18      Florida
30      Tina Roy        G       5-11    —       ——-     R       South Carolina
23      Shoni Schimmel  G       5-9     161     5/4/92  2       Louisville
0       Meighan Simmons G       5-9     140     1/25/92 1       Tennessee
3       Amanda Thompson F       6-1     172     11/18/87        2       Oklahoma
33      Courtney Walker G       5-8     160     4/28/94 R       Texas A&M
52      Elizabeth Williams      C/F     6-3     192     6/23/93 1       Duke

According to the numbers nine of these women will not make the final roster. There are players who will have little competition for their spot, Angel McCoughtry for example. Players like Shoni Schimmel who entered training camp in less than full form last season will have intense competition from a slew of rookie and 2nd year guards; Walker, Simmons, Roy, Massengale, Johnson,, Holmes, Cortijo for her spot.
At the Forward position DMJ will have competition from Williams, Thompson, Holivay, Gray, and Burdick.

Update 5-1-16
The Dream cut 10 year veteran Kara Braxton who was the biggest player on their roster. Still on the roster is 6-4 rookie Rachel Holivay. Two inches shorter but ten years younger. Also no longer on the roster is Amanda Thompson a forward with two years experience in the league.
As we approach the start of the regular season more cuts will come in Atlanta and at the other eleven training camps around the country. With so much young talent Braxton is surely not the only veteran to lose out to youth this season.
Already the Stars have waived veteran Danielle Adams, but I bet she ends up elsewhere in the league.

Update 5-3-16
Yesterday the Dream traded Shoni Schimmel to the NY Liberty for a second round draft pick in 2017. Coach Cooper was not impressed when she came to camp without the proper conditioning to begin the five month season.
http://www.ajc.com/news/sports/basketball/dreams-cooper-disappointed-in-schimmel/nrCFb/
The number eight pick in 2014 traded for what will likely be something like pick number 20-24 in 2017. I understand and respect Schimmel's commitment to family and her decision not to play overseas in the off season. Unfortunately in the competition for one of only 144 WNBA roster spots this lack of overseas play hurts one's chances.
Schimmel has her work cut out for her to make the Liberty roster which is packed with more experienced guards than she was competing with in Atlanta.
While the Liberty have three Rookie guards in camp they are thick with guards with equal or more experience than Schimmel. Brittany Boyd has one year of WNBA experience and one winter overseas so has about as much experience as Shoni who has not played overseas. Sugar Rogers is the same height and weight as Schimmel and has one more year of professional experience and international play on top of that. Then there are the veterans; returning Liberty players Tanisha Wright and Epiphany Prince, and recent free agent signings Lindsay Harding and Shavonte Zellous.
That all being said we have already got our tickets to see the Liberty play the Seattle Storm at Key Arena in June in hopes of seeing Schimmel take the court and wow us with a little Showtime?

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Pre-Season 2014

Storm Pre Season
It was great to be back at Key Arena for a Storm game, even a pre season contest against the Los Angeles Sparks. Despite their flat play the Storm were ahead going into the forth quarter, then their scoring went to shit and they handed the game to LA. It made sense coach Brian Agler wanting see how certain newbies handled themselves, so I'm not gonna get stuck on the fact they only scored seven points in the final ten minutes.

The following day the Storm waived rookie guard Jasmine Lister out of Vanderbuilt who played less than five minutes on Sunday,  grabbed a defensive rebound and is now gone, leaving eleven players on the roster. Will Agler add one more new face before Friday when the Storm face the LA Sparks in their season opener at the Key?

I bet he does. But who? Will he go with youth and short-term gains or invest in experience for this season? A whole lot of talent got waived today across the league. Rookies like Meghan Simmons and Cassie Harberts, second year players Kalana Greene and Avery Warley, Third year guard Samantha Prahalis and even veteran Nicole Powell. Any of these fine players could take the court in a Storm uniform before the week is out.

May 15. The Day Before Home Opener.
Coach Agler did what I predicted, though not exactly. He did bring on a seasoned veteran, Nicole Powell who had been waived by Tulsa Shock a few days earlier. He also waived forward Michele Plouffe, the second round pick this year out of Utah, leaving the Storm with a roster of 11 players with a little more than 24 hours to go before the LA Sparks return to the Key for the Storm season opener.

Ten season veteran out of Stanford Nicole Powell joins a team once again stacked with veteran players. Only one of the seven rookies who checked in to training camp has made the roster. Angel Robinson out of Georgia who honed her skills playing overseas for two seasons will provide the team with much needed depth to their post play. I am excited to see how Agler and the coaching staff work these new forwards into the rotation.

This time last year we had no Bird, no Jackson, no Katie Smith. We did have Tina Thompson. Noelle Quinn, Temeka Johnson and Nakia Sanford had just joined the team as did rookie Tianna Hawkins, the Storm's first round draft pick out of Maryland.

This year the one rookie, Angel Robinson has overseas professional experience, Noelle and Temeka are back as well as Bird, Shekinna Stricklen and Alysha Clarke have more experience and Crystal Langhorne and Nicolle Powell will round out the squad and can hopefully accumulate scoring to make up for Thompson's retirement from playing professional hoops.

As well as the Storm did last year, finishing at .500 and making the playoffs after having been predicted to flounder, I think this version of the Seattle Storm is capable of going even further.

And that is Stormy Speculation.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Training Camp Thoughts.

Stormy Speculation. One Man's Thoughts on the Seattle Storm and the WNBA.
May 1, 2014.

I am writing this to help me get back into the practice of regular writing and to express my thoughts and opinions about a game and a league that I have the greatest respect for. I hope to educate folks about this very competitive collection of twelve teams fielding 144 women playing professional basketball across the USA and inspire folks to go out to a game when they have the chance.

I'm not a weather man but I've got some idea of where the wind blows when it comes to the Seattle Storm of the Women's National Basketball Association. When asked how I know this stuff I simply reply, "I pay attention."

The Storm started training camp last week in Seattle with a rooster of 17 players. Many of the veteran league players such as Sue Bird and were wrapping up their seasons overseas. It was the younger players without a guaranteed rooster spot for the 2014 season who are trying to impress the coaching staff to secure one of the five remaining positions before the season kicks off in mid-May.

Under the new Collective Bargaining Agreement between the league and the players a team can have one more player on the rooster than under the previous contract. This change was made to address the problem of season ending injuries like those that affected the Liberty, Mercury, Storm and other teams in recent seasons.

The seven players with guaranteed contracts are; guards Sue Bird, Tanisha Wright, and Temeka Johnson, forwards Noelle Quinn, Camille Little, Shekinna Strickland and recently acquired center Cystal Langhorne.

Before I get into who is on the court vieing for those remaining spots let's talk about who is not there. The WNBA's all time leading scorer Tina Thomposn is not there as she retired after last season. Forward and fan favorite Ashley Robinson is not there, her contract from late last season not being renewed. Three time league MVP Lauren Jackson was injured while playing in China this year and will sit out the WNBA season while she recovers in Australia. She is expected back next season.

These realities were not unexpected. What was unexpected is that the first round draft picks from both 2013 (Tianna Hawkins, Maryland) and 2014 (Bria Hartley, UCONN) are not here in Seattle. During the WNBA college draft last month the Storm traded both these players to the Washington Mystics in exchange for much needed experience at the post in the form of Crystal Langhorne.

Another player absent from camp is forward Charde Houston whom the Storm acquired in March from the Phoenix Mercury in exchange for the rights to the Polish Pistol, Ewelina Kobryn who had last played for the Storm in the 2012 season when they boasted the most international lineup of any team in the league. The Storm released Houston prior to the start of training camp. They had six other tall forwards in camp with lower pay checks than the league veteran Houston would earn. I will keep an eye out for where Houston ends up this season. I had been looking forward to seeing her play for the Storm.

Of the guaranteed slots the only player with less than six years professional experience is Shekinna Strickland whom the Storm chose as the number two pick in the 2012 college draft. In order to secure that pick the Storm traded All-Star Swin Cash,  forward Le'coe Willingham and their second round pick that year to the Chicago Sky.

Ten players going for five positions.
In 2012 the Storm signed Middle Tennessee State University forward Alysha Clarke as a free agent. She had been drafted in the second round by San Antonio in the 2010 college draft.

Australian forward Jenna O'Hea, a three year veteran of the WNBA was acquired from the LA Sparks in exchange for the second round pick in the 2015 college draft.

Forward Jocyln Tinkle graduated Stanford in 2013 and played in seven games for Seattle at the tail end of last season. She averaged around 2 minutes in the one playoff and six regular season games, made some rebounds but contributed no scoring.

The other seven players are Rookies to the league.
The Storm signed 6'5" forward Angel Robinson prior to the draft. A graduate of Georgia she has professional experience overseas, playing with the Perfumerias in Spain for the past two seasons.

The Storm's 2nd and 3rd round picks this year are both from the PAC 12 Conference and are both at the training camp. Utah's Michelle Plouffe (6'4") and Stanford's Mikaela Ruff(6' 3") were added in the 2nd and 3rd round respectively. Both are standout forwards and are both taller than the seven core players.

Guards Jasmine Lister, a star at Vanderbilt, Valencia McFarland, a recent graduate of Mississippi, and Chelsea Douglas from Wake Forest University were all signed to training camp contracts. The camp is rounded out by forward Taylor Hall from University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.

Who is going to be able to prove themselves and make the cut prior to the first pre-season game on Mother's Day or the season opener the following Friday? To me it looks like the battle of the bigs. Will Alysha Clarke maintain her spot on the roster? Will Angel Robinson be able to out perform the two draft picks to take a spot from one of them? What about Taylor Hall, could she out compete a taller woman and secure a bench spot for herself? What about the three guards invited to camp? Will one of them be given the 12th spot just in case Sue, Tanisha or Temeka has to sit out?

There are more questions than there are days to the start of the season. If last season is any indication we can be sure that Coach Brian Agler will choose a team that can play together against the odds and thrill the fans to no end.

May 6, 2014 Update. Before the first exhibition game against the Australian National Team, Jayco Opals the Storm reduced the roster to fourteen players. The three who were released were Taylor Hall, Chelsea Douglas and Jocyln Tinkle. The Storm won that game 71-57.
The next game is a closed scrimmage against the Chinese National Team on Thursday May 8.
My next post will follow the pre-season game against the LA Sparks on Sunday, May 11.
Brett Clubbe.