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Storm blown out by 41 in season opening loss to Aces to start a new era 

Seattle Storm (Photo by Stan Morris / fi360 News)

Seattle, WA – To begin a new era in the Seattle Storm’s franchise history without Sue Bird and Breanna Stewart, the four-time WNBA Champions were blasted at home by the defending champion Las Vegas Aces. The 41-point loss was the worst in franchise history, as Seattle is searching for new faces to step into the spotlight and takeover alongside shooting guard Jewell Loyd. While the Storm came out in the first quarter and matched the energy and effort of the Aces, Las Vegas’ starting five imposed their will in the paint when the second quarter began and never looked back. 

This game started out hot for Seattle and the Storm, as veteran point guard Yvonne Turner and a returning Mercedes Russell came out with energy and unafraid of the super team that is the Aces. Seattle was able to stay toe-to-toe with Las Vegas through the first quarter, with high energy and effort. Although rebounding was a primary issue for the Storm last season, Seattle was able to clog the lane defensively and hold Candace Parker and A’ja Wilson to limited impact through those first fifteen minutes. It appeared that this Storm team may be able to hang with Las Vegas in this season opener, as they remained active defensively and were using high energy to stay in the face of their opponent. 

Las Vegas Aces vs Seattle Storm (Photo by Stan Morris / fi360 News)

“Obviously nobody wants to lose, and nobody wants to lose this bad, we understand that. As professional athletes, you gotta come up with some pride and integrity. We’ve got a lot of new people in there that are kinda shocked. For us that was a good test, to play the defending champions, we’ve gotta see what it’s like to get to that level. I think it’s a good eye opener for us. We’ve just got to stay encouraged, watch film, and get better,” Jewell Loyd, Seattle Storm shooting guard, on today’s game.    

With Mercedes Russell returning to the lineup following last season that saw her deal with a non-basketball related injury all year long, it appeared that Seattle was going to get some quality help with their paint presence. Through that first quarter, it appeared that was going to be true as Russell at center and Ezi Magbegor at power forward seemed to be a strong combination that was battling against the talented Aces front court. Las Vegas adjusted, and tortured Seattle in the paint for the rest of the night after those 15 fifteen minutes. The Aces were getting whatever they wanted in the paint, and when the Storm tried to help inside, Las Vegas was able to knock shots down from the perimeter. Things were falling apart for Seattle, and fast.   

Las Vegas Aces vs Seattle Storm (Photo by Stan Morris / fi360 News)

“A positive is that we have so much to work on, that’s not us obviously. I think we can get back to the drawing board and work on our strengths as a team. That’s my takeaway,” Ezi Magbegor, Seattle Storm center, on today’s game.   

Following the biggest loss in Storm franchise history, Seattle looks to get back to the film and hit the practice court ahead of their next battle, Friday May 26th with a tipoff time of 7PM PST against the Dallas Wings. The Wings are coming off a seven-point season opening victory against the young Atlanta Dream team, as three of the Dallas starters scored at least 20 points including Arike Ogunbowale’s 27. It’ll be another tough test for Seattle early into this season, as the Wings and Storm have had brutal battles down to the wire in the past few years.   

Seattle Storm coach Noelle Quinn (Photo by Stan Morris / fi360 News)

Sparks shine bright on opening night

Nnneka Ogwumike #30 goes to the basket. (Photo by Full Image 360)

Los Angeles, CA – With the bright lights on National TV on ESPN for the night cap of WNBA triple header the Sparks shinned with a 94 – 71 victory. Not a surprise Nneka Ogwumike #30 was the guiding light scoring 17 points to lead all scores.

“We had a slow start and we didn’t get to low or too high,” said N. Ogwumike

N. Ogwumike #30 boxes out Brittney Griner #42 for a rebound. (Photo by Full Image 360)

Behind new head coach Curt Miller the Los Angeles Sparks showed that with a limited bench with only 9 players in rotation they could gel and put points on the board.

When the Vice President of the United States Kamala Harris is present to kickoff the 2023 WNBA Season for Los Angeles Sparks you have no choice but to show off.

After a slow start by the Sparks the Phoenix Mercury took a first quarter lead 22-19 after a 9-0 run to jumpstart this game. The much anticipated return of Brittney Griner was huge and she didn’t disappoint scoring 11 points in first half and finished the game with 18 points and 5 rebounds.

Balance scoring with 5 players scoring in double figures with Chiney Ogwumike #13 15, Lexie Brown #4 14, Karlie Samuelson #44 13 and rookie Zia Cooke #1 14 points.

Zia Cooke #1 points out the offense. (Photo by Full Image 360)

“We waived Samuelson before the season knowing that we would be able to be resigned as hardship signee.” said Miller, “She is just a sound fundamental player with great mechanics.

The Sparks bench players stepped up and you can see why coach Miller brought in so many veterans to compete for a roster spot and compete on the court.

The Sparks really took care of the basketball tonight with only 6 turnovers in the game. On the defense side of the ball they made the Mercury force up shots late in the shot clock. It’s always good to start their offense with a few defense stops.

Jordin Canada #21 makes a move on Moriah Jefferson #8. (Photo by Full Image 360)

“To our credit we dug ourselves out of double-digit deficient to winning double-digit victory,” said Miller.

Next up the Sparks will host the Las Vegas Aces on Thursday May 25th with 7pm pst tipoff.

Sparks Announce 2023 Final Roster

Ogwumike's with coach Miller (Photo by Full Image 360)

LOS ANGELES (May 18, 2023) – The Los Angeles Sparks, led by Head Coach Curt Miller, tip off the 2023 season tomorrow, Friday May 19th, at Crypto.com Arena against the Phoenix Mercury at 8 p.m. PT on ESPN.

The Sparks 12-woman final roster returns five players from the 2022 Sparks, led by former MVP and WNBA champion Nneka Ogwumike. Also returning is two-time WNBA All-Star Chiney Ogwumike, WNBA Champions Lexie Brown and Jordin Canada, and Southern California native Katie Lou Samuelson, who will miss the 2023 season (pregnancy).

The newest additions feature WNBA Champion Azura Stevens, two-time All-Star, Sixth Woman of the Year and 2022 WNBA Champion Dearica Hamby, and three-time WNBA All-Defensive First Team selection and 2017 All-Star Jasmine Thomas. The Sparks also signed former WNBL MVP Steph Talbot this offseason, who will miss the 2023 season with a torn ACL suffered this offseason.

Rookie and No. 10 pick Zia Cooke (South Carolina) will make her regular season debut for Los Angeles, while the No. 14 pick Shaneice Swain (Australia) will not come over to the WNBA in 2023.

The Sparks rounded out the 2023 roster with WNBA All-Star Layshia Clarendon and forward Joyner Holmes. In addition, the Sparks today claimed second-year combo guard Nia Clouden off waivers. Clouden was drafted No. 12 overall by the Connecticut Sun in the 2022 WNBA Draft. The Michigan State standout scored 50 points in a collegiate game against Florida Gulf Coast, setting a program record.

The Sparks lead the WNBA with 20 franchise postseason appearances and are the only franchise to reach 500 regular season wins.

Final Roster

No.PlayerPOSEXPDOBCollege/Country  
1Zia CookeGR9-Jan-01South Carolina/USA
4Lexie BrownG527-Oct-94Duke/USA
5Dearica HambyF96-Nov-93Wake Forest/USA
13Chiney OgwumikeF-C521-Mar-92Stanford/USA
15Jasmine ThomasG1230-Sept-89Duke/USA
21Jordin CanadaG511-Aug-95UCLA/USA
23Azura StevensC51-Feb-96Connecticut/USA
24Joyner HolmesF322-Feb-98Texas
25Layshia ClarendonG102-May-91Cal/USA
30Nneka OgwumikeF102-Jul-90Stanford/USA
33*Katie Lou SamuelsonF413-Jun-97Connecticut/USA
 2 Nia Clouden G 1 17-May-00 Michigan/ USA

*Katie Lou Samuelson will miss the 2023 season (pregnancy)

*Steph Talbot will miss the 2023 season (ACL) 

Basketball Operations & Coaching Staff

Curt Miller (Photo by Full Image 360)

Chief Administrative Officer and General Manager – Karen Bryant

Assistant General Manager – Eli Horowitz

Vice President, Operations & Player Relations- Ilene Hauser

Head Coach- Curt Miller

Assistant Coach- Chris Koclanes

Assistant Coach- Steve Smith

Assistant Coach – Danielle Viglione

Player Development Coach- Nola Henry

Video & Analytics Coordinator- Addison Lee

Director of Sports Medicine/Head Athletic Trainer- Dr. Courtney Watson

Assistant Athletic Trainer- Charvette Johnson

Strength and Performance Coach –Emily Blurton

Equipment & Facilities Manager – Thomas Archie

ABOUT THE LOS ANGELES SPARKS

Founded in 1996, the Los Angeles Sparks are one of three original franchises in the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA). The Sparks have won three WNBA Championships (2001, 2002, 2016), have qualified for the playoffs in 20 of their 26 seasons and remain the only active team in the league to win back-to-back titles. The Los Angeles Sparks are dedicated to ensuring each home game at Crypto.com Arena has a championship level entertainment experience while showcasing the best female athletes from around the world on the court. LA Sparks 2023 tickets are availablehere for purchase.

SEATTLE SETS OPENING DAY ROSTER

Seattle Storm (Photo by Full Image 360)

Storm hosts Las Vegas on Saturday for 2023 Opening Day presented by Providence Swedish

SEATTLE — The Seattle Storm announced today it has finalized its 12-player roster for Saturday’s Opening Day game presented by Providence Swedish.

Seattle is led by a trio of returning players in Jewell Loyd, Ezi Magbegor, and Mercedes Russell, each a member of the 2020 WNBA Championship team with Russell and Loyd also on the 2018 Championship team. Loyd, a two-time All-WNBA pick and four-time All-Star, has averaged at least 15.5 points per game in each of the last three season. Magbegor earned 2022 All-Defensive Team honors after ranking second in the league in blocks at 1.8 per game, adding 9.5 ppg and 5.6 rpg. Russell missed much of 2022 due to injury, but looks to return to her 2021 form where she averaged 7.3 points and 6.1 rebounds per game while shooting 61.7% from the field–the third-highest mark in franchise history (min. 100 FGA).

Ezi Magbegor (Photo by Full Image 360)

The 2023 Storm features several new faces, though a few will be familiar to many Storm fans. Seattle welcomes back guard Sami Whitcomb, who earned a pair of WNBA Championship rings with the Storm in 2018 and 2020. In addition, Seattle signed guard Kia Nurse, who has looked strong in camp while making her return to the WNBA after missing the 2022 season due to an ACL injury suffered 39 seconds in Game 4 of the 2021 WNBA Semifinals.

Seattle’s roster includes a trio of point guards led by veteran Yvonne Turner, who has played 13 seasons in Europe along with four seasons in the WNBA. Rookies Jade Melbourne and Ivana Dojkić will join Turner at the point. Melbourne, the Storm’s third-round pick in 2022, is the youngest player on a WNBA roster at 20 years old. She is coming off an impressive WNBL season which saw her earn second-team all-WNBL honors after leading the league with 6.1 assists per game. Dojkić, a member of the Croatian National Team and a EuroLeague veteran, will be making her WNBA debut with the Storm after nine seasons in Europe. She averaged 12.1 points and 3.8 assists per game for Italy’s top-flight team Bologna this past winter.

Arella Guirantes #11 (Photo by Full Image 360)

Other newcomers to the Storm roster include free agent signees Kaila Charles and Arella Guirantes along with 2023 draft picks Jordan Horston and Dulcy Fankam Mendjiadeu. Charles, who enters her fourth year in the league, posted impressive numbers in Israel this offseason, leading the top division with 24.0 ppg. Guirantes had equally impressive numbers in Hungary’s top division, averaging 16.8 points and 7.2 rebounds per game.

Horston, the Storm’s 2023 first-round draft pick, will likely see time at forward, but can play the guard position as needed. Mendjiadeu, a 6-4 forward from Nkongsamba, Cameroon, selected with the Storm’s second-round pick, averaged 16.5 points and 12.3 rebounds per game as a senior at the University of South Florida. She becomes the first player born in Cameroon to make a WNBA roster.

The Storm made its final roster move today, waiving center Theresa Plaisance. Plaisance, a 2022 WNBA Champion with the Las Vegas Aces, was originally drafted by the Tulsa Shock in the third round (No. 27 overall) of the 2014 WNBA Draft. The nine-year WNBA veteran played five-plus seasons with the franchise, which relocated to Dallas and became the Wings prior to the 2016 campaign. Dallas traded Plaisance to Connecticut on August 6, 2019, where she stayed until signing a free agent contract with the Washington Mystics in 2021.

The full Storm roster is below and can also be found at https://storm.wnba.com/roster/.

The Storm opens the season on Saturday at Climate Pledge Arena, hosting the 2022 WNBA Champion Las Vegas Aces in a rematch of last year’s semifinal battle. The game will be nationally televised on ABC with tip off slated for 12:00 p.m.

Jewell Loyd (Photo by Full Image 360)

Storm 360° Season Ticket Memberships, Mini Plans, and Group Experiences are all still available, along with single-game tickets to all 2022 Storm games. For more information, visit http://stormbasketball.com, or call 206-217-WNBA (9622).

2023 SEATTLE STORM ROSTER  
NO.NAMEPOSHTWTDOBEXPUS COLLEGECOUNTRY
0Kia NurseG6-0181Feb. 22, 19964ConnecticutCanada
3Kaila CharlesG/F6-1168Mar. 23, 19983MarylandUSA
6Jade MelbourneG5-11145Aug. 18, 2002RAustralia
11Arella GuirantesG5-11176Oct. 15, 19971RutgersPuerto Rico
12Dulcy Fankam MendjiadeuF/C6-3204July 26, 1999RSouth FloridaCameroon
13Ezi MagbegorC6-4181Aug. 13, 19993Australia
18Ivana DojkićG5-11154Dec. 24, 1997RCroatia
21Mercedes RussellC6-6195July 27, 19955TennesseeUSA
22Yvonne TurnerG5-10127Oct. 13, 19874NebraskaUSA
23Jordan HorstonG/F6-2165May 21, 2001RTennesseeUSA
24Jewell LoydG5-10165Oct. 5, 19938Notre DameUSA
32Sami WhitcombG5-10154July 20, 19886WashingtonAustralia

Head Coach: Noelle Quinn (UCLA) – 3rd                                     

Assistant Coach: Pokey Chatman (LSU)

Assistant Coach: Ebony Hoffman (USC)

Assistant Coach: Perry Huang (Fresno Pacific)

—— StormBasketball.com ——

WNBA 2023 Season is here

LA Sparks (Photo by Full Image 360)

Los Angeles, CA – The time is now, we have all been waiting for the 2023 WNBA Season to kickoff. League play begins this Friday May 19th. The Phoenix Mercury vs Los Angeles Sparks on ESPN at 8pm PST at Crypto.com Arena will be the night cap.

LA Sparks Chiney Owwumike (#13) (Photo by Full Image 360)

With new coach Curt Miller is tasked with rebuilding the Los Angeles Sparks, who have so much rich history of winning championships. The current training camp roster is changing day by day. Thursday May 18th at 5pm is the deadline for the season starting roster for all teams.

The Sparks have played two preseason / scrimmages to see the strength and weakness of each players to fix the puzzle of a cohesive team built to play defense first to set off a great offense. Miller has a track record of taking on teams and making them relevant come playoff time.

During the last scrimmage verse the up and coming Seattle Storm team took the victory 76-69 final. The Storm was lead by Arella Guirantes (#11) who scored 13 points in only 11 minutes of play mainly in the second half. She made Storm coach Noelle Quinn take notice by taking over.

Jordin Canada brings the ball up the court. (Photo by Full Image 360)

The Sparks guard Karlie Samuelson was tops with 11 points playing the most minutes in the game at 24:20. This last ditch performance wasn’t enough to not be waived before the final roster.

“There night’s when get out talented, out executed but we should never feel that we were out toughed,” said Miller.

The Ogwumike sister will be a big key to success of this 2023 season, with Nneka offensive fire power and Chiney scrappy defense.

Waived Rae Burrell (#12) drops a shot in the lane. (Photo Full Image 360)

A roster surprise was Rae Burrell (#12) being released after showing great promise in camp grabbing 5 rebounds with 5 points in a limited role.

“We did some good things, again there were stretches in both game where defensively we did some good things,” said Miller.

The Sparks will finalize their roster in less then 24 hours, it’s going to be an exciting season to see how far they can go.

Los Angeles Sparks (Photo by Full Image 360)

Last rodeo: Kraken fail to generate enough offense in game seven loss to Stars

Photo by Aaron Nelson / fi360 News

Dallas, TX – To end an almost storybook second season in franchise history, the Seattle Kraken fell in a tightly contested game seven in Dallas against the Stars. Game seven Grubauer made another appearance, keeping his team in the game with numerous big saves and denials. Unfortunately, like many great pitchers for our Mariners, Grubauer couldn’t get any support in terms of the offense in front of him and mistakes eventually were the downfall of the Kraken. Dallas took advantage of a turnover by Seattle defenseman Jamie Oleksiak and caught the Kraken defense playing aggressively to result in a two-goal hole that proved insurmountable.  

“You draw a perspective after time, but you got a pretty clear perspective of this group of guys and the type of team and the type of teammates that they are. We pushed as hard as we could push tonight. We couldn’t find our Top Gear and give Dallas a lot of credit in that regard. I thought they answered to a certain degree. They answered the game that we played in Game six. They came home into their home building and put us under pressure. And as you got into that second period, that’s where they tilted the game, their direction,” Dave Hakstol, Seattle Kraken head coach, on his overall reflection of the game.  

Unlike their games one, three, and six starts, the Kraken failed to get out on the front foot with pressure and physicality against the Stars in this series deciding game seven. Dallas brought the pressure early and often after a small initial surge from Seattle, forcing Kraken goaltender Philipp Grubauer to make numerous saves while the skaters sacrificed their bodies with numerous blocked shots. On the road, against a deep and talented team like the Stars, it makes sense that Seattle was going to get pushed a bit, but it was disappointing considering the capability of this team displayed throughout these Stanley Cup Playoffs. Although the shot total through the first 20 minutes was tied at nine, the Stars had generated far more dangerous opportunities than the Kraken had and were getting whatever looks that they wanted. 

Two critical mistakes resulted in goals for the Dallas Stars, and those mistakes ended up being the dagger driven into the Seattle Kraken season. The first of those two came as Dallas had been applying merciless pressure to Grubauer, as the goaltender was forced to make numerous big saves in different situations to keep things level as we approached second intermission. Stars defenseman Esa Lindell had cleared a puck from his own zone up the ice, where it found a retreating Jamie Oleksiak. The puck took on odd first bounce, dying upon impact and not sliding to the back-skating Oleksiak, catching the Kraken defenseman off guard. The ball of energy he’s been all series, Roope Hintz had kept an eye on the play and pursued, swooping the puck away from the stick of Oleksiak and wristing a shot past Grubauer all in a few quick motions.  

Seattle pressed on, getting some danger in their opportunities, but nothing was getting by Dallas netminder Jake Oettinger. Despite the goal against, Grubauer remained locked in as the Stars searched for the insurance goal that could get them into the Western Conference final. With seven minutes left, Dallas’ search was over, in a play that went the full length of the ice. Stars forward Evgenii Dadonov retrieved a puck that the Kraken had sent around the boards, finding a teammate down the ice and through a few Seattle skaters. The puck bounced cleanly off the boards to Dallas rookie Wyatt Johnston, who used a wicked backhand shot to sneak up the shoulder of Grubauer and in. Although Seattle forward Oliver Bjorkstrand found a goal with 17 seconds left, Johnston’s score had nailed Seattle into a coffin they couldn’t bust out of. The voyage had ended, running ashore in Big D.  

“Yeah, two game sevens. I think we’ve done a great job. I don’t think we came out as good as we did in game six, but we found a way to battle back there. And, yeah, I’m really proud of this group and how we played the whole season and the playoffs and tough pill to swallow, for sure,” Philipp Grubauer, Seattle Kraken goaltender, on tonight’s game. 

Seattle heads into only their second offseason ever, with plenty to be happy about and numerous different angles to look at in a positive light. The first order of business that may come to mind could be upcoming free agents, most notable being Vince Dunn who had a career year for the Kraken. Some of the names that Seattle will have to make decisions on include Joonas Donskoi, Carson Soucy, Ryan Donato, Will Borgen, and Daniel Sprong the most likely to be pondered over the most. Awards season will come, with Matty Beniers likely taking home the Calder trophy, and then the NHL Draft will come around in a time that brings potential to add you with selections or the possibility to trade those picks for proven commodities.  

Kraken flip the script on Stars, use sustained hot start to force game seven 

Period 1

Seattle, WA – Time and time again in their second season in franchise history, the Seattle Kraken have defied the odds and neglected the naysayers that told them that they could not reach new heights. Today’s game six in the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs was no different, as the Kraken powered their way past the Stars for a 6-3 victory to send this series to a game seven. Seattle was able to find the sort of pace and pressure that they needed to begin the game hot, just as Dallas had in the last two contests, and brought the attack to the Stars. Seattle forces a game seven in Dallas, on Monday the 15th

In games four and five, the Stars have been the ones who came out on fire looking to stun the Kraken, just as Seattle had done in every game of their round one matchup against the Avalanche. Dallas had put together their top line of Robertson-Hintz-Pavelski, and Seattle didn’t have an answer for it as the Stars took the past two games in commanding fashion. If they were going to keep this series going and ensure that they didn’t head out into the offseason just yet, the Kraken needed to flip the script and get out on the front foot before the Stars, especially in their home building. Still a somewhat young team in terms of their players ages and the franchise itself, Seattle looked to their leadership to get things going.  

Alternate captain, and fan favorite to become the team’s captain, Yanni Gourde was the one who got the party started for the Kraken with a persistent goal around the nine-minute mark into the first frame. Taking advantage of a turnover by Dallas, Seattle brought the puck up ice as Eeli Tolvanen found Gourde out on the wing, jamming the puck against Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger’s pads. Gourde found his own rebound over the right pad of Oettinger, who had just gotten out of his butterfly stance, to get things going and gave the fans a mean mug in celebration. A two-time cup winner himself, Gourde knows what it takes to win these elimination games and was able to ignite the Kraken attack. 

“I think our transition was faster a little bit, and then I think we get to the net a little bit quicker, fight through the box out, try to get there, and yeah, I think that was the main key of our games tonight,” Yanni Gourde, Seattle Kraken forward and alternate captain, on the priorities of tonight’s game. 

Just around 30 seconds later, the Stars were able to find an answer on an odd-man rush, catching the Kraken in a bit of a change that left Mason Marchment open with an easy goal. Weathering Dallas’ responses was going to be a key aspect to this game, as if Seattle was unable to do so, they could quickly be overwhelmed and as a result be packing up for the offseason. The Kraken remained calm, drawing a power play late into the first, and finally busting through on the main advantage as alternate captain Jordan Eberle took a rebound and weaved around a sprawled-out Oettinger to score and regain the Seattle lead. That sort of response and ability to weather the pushback of the Stars, was a huge factor in why the Kraken were able to win tonight and force a game seven.  

“I feel like that’s part of the playoffs. I feel like we did that in last couple of games when they scored and I feel like we had a pushback, so we knew that they’re going to have pushbacks and they’re going to have their chances. But I think we play pretty well and we played cool, so it’s just a credit for the team that we can weather those and just move on,” Eeli Tolvanen, Seattle Kraken forward, on the team weathering Dallas’ pushbacks.   

The Kraken will now head back to Dallas to play the win and advance game seven that will decide who will head to the Conference finals to battle Edmonton or Las Vegas. Game seven between Seattle and Dallas will take place on Monday, May 15th with a puck drop of 5PM PST and will be broadcast on ESPN. The Kraken will once again need this sort of hot start and sustained pace to get the right outcome when they battle the Stars in Dallas, knowing that their opponent will surely look to come out with a fight of their own.  

Warriors Fight Off Elimination

Stephen Curry driving the lane. (Photo Full Image 360)

SAN FRANCISCO, CA — On the brink of elimination for the second time in two weeks, the reigning NBA Champion Golden State Warriors staved off elimination cruising to a convincing 121-106 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers on Wednesday,  May 10 at Chase Center. The Lakers lead 3-2 in the Western Conference Semifinal, with Game 6 tomorrow in Los Angeles at Crypto.com Arena. 

It was the most complete victory of the series for Dub Nation. Steph Curry, Draymond Green and Andrew Wiggins all scored more than 20 points in the lopsided win. 

Perhaps even worse for the Lakers is the health of Anthony Davis. He took an inadvertent elbow from Kevon Looney in the fourth quarter and exited with a head injury evidently bad enough to prevent him from returning to a game that was still within reach. His availability for Game 6 is shrouded in mystery and only adds intrigue to the dramatic, well played series.


Early on, Draymond Green was looking to score rather than pass up open shots.  This was the right decision, as his will and energy powered the Warriors to victory. He took most of those open shots, and was successful enough to score 20 points.


 “Draymond is one of the greatest competitors I’ve been around. So you expect him to bring it,” said Warriors Head Coach Steve Kerr. 

This was easily the most impactful and best performance  by Andrew Wiggins in the semifinals.  Wiggins had 25 points (on 10-for-18 shooting), seven rebounds, six assists and a player on the floor the Lakers had to respect all game. 

Keep in mind that Wiggins is also guarding James, meaning he’s burning energy at both ends. 
AD had 23 points and 11 rebounds while LeBron added 25 in the loss. The role players did not show up,  Rui Hachimura, not D’Angelo Russell or Jarred Vanderbilt and not even Walker, who scored four points for the game and zero in this fourth quarter. 

It isn’t cause for great concern since role players, especially on the road,  don’t usually play well away from LA Live. However, the depth and the maturation of the supporting cast has been paramount in this triumphant playoff run. 

Game 6 is tomorrow, May 12 at Crypto.com Arena, where the Purple and Gold have been undefeated this postseason. Warriors fans  will be crossing their fingers for another great appearance from “Game 6 Klay.” While the Laker faithful remain optimistic they will knock out the Champs once and for all.  Tipoff is 7:00pm and the game will air on ESPN. 

Stars give Kraken a taste of their own medicine with offensive blast to tie series 

Seattle Kraken (Photo by Megan Connelly / fi360 News)

Seattle, WA – In game four of this second round Stanley Cup Playoffs series, the Dallas Stars flipped the script on the Seattle Kraken with a huge second period that led to the Stars taking a victory inside of the Kraken’s home barn. Just as Seattle had done in game three of the series, Dallas was able to bring the fight early and breakthrough in period two to give themselves a strong cushion to lay back on as they tied the series at two games each. The Kraken never seemed to lock into a groove offensively, failing to sustain much of any time in the Stars zone until things were too far out of reach. The result sends this game back to Dallas for game five of the series, and with the series now tied through four games, the two teams will essentially play a best of three. A potential big boost for Seattle going forward is that forward and 40-goal scorer Jared McCann returned to the Kraken lineup in this game.  

“They had a higher desperation to start the game. Executed better. They were the more aggressive team and we were on our heels and weren’t able to… spend enough time in the o-zone,” Jaden Schwartz, Seattle Kraken forward and alternate captain, on Dallas’ effort. 

If you took games three and four of this second round Stanley Cup Playoffs series, it’d be hard to decipher many of the different in the two when placed atop each other for comparison. In each contest, there was a major surge in the second period after that same team had a strong opening frame but either couldn’t score or only got one. That, the fact that the losing team pulled their starting goaltender heading into the third period, as well as how the losing side simply couldn’t put together sustainable offense in the opposing zone, and these games are nearly identical to each, just with different results. Ironically, these two results are much different than the contests that the team had in the regular season, with two of three of those battles heading into the overtime period.  

The Stars were able to dictate play throughout the first frame, putting the pressure on Kraken goaltender Philipp Grubauer and the team’s defensive back end, eventually forcing enough of a slip to gain a power play. Seattle’s strong penalty kill wasn’t able to bail them out this time, as Dallas’ Jamie Benn snapped a shot home with a goal that saw him effectively use two Seattle skaters as moving screens. The Kraken got the rare battle back opportunity, but it was never a fully constructed play and often was built out of chaos rather than anything else. From there, the floodgates of the Stars offense parted wide and far, as Dallas founds way to score with some of his balanced and good game. The Stars easily picked apart the holes left in the Kraken defensive backend, and things got ugly quickly.  

“A shift where there’s an extra effort play where a guy goes out and shows that his will is a little above his opponent’s has a way of building and shifting momentum… we’re going to need a whole lot more of that,” Dave Hakstol, Seattle Kraken head coach, on the team’s effort tonight. 

Game five of this series will take place on Thursday, May 11th with a puck drop time of 6:30PM PST. This matchup back in the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas will be broadcast on TNT as the Kraken will look to bounce back after they allowed six goals on home ice to this Stars team in this game today. Seattle will be aiming to further reintegrate star forward Jared McCann into the lineup ahead of game five, as having him back up to full strength is a major addition to this lineup and could be an X-Factor that pushes them over the edge. With today’s result, there will be a game six and that will take place on Saturday, May 13th with a puck drop time of 4PM PST, and it will be broadcast across ESPN.   

Lonnie Walker’s Lakers Magic

Lonnie Walker IV

LOS ANGELES, CA — Trailing by seven points after three quarters Lonnie Walker IV, a guard who has been buried on the bench in the Playoffs this far, spearheaded the comeback by scoring all 15 of his points as the Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Golden State Warriors, 104-101 on Monday, May 8. Walker had the Crypto.com Arena rafters shaking with his brilliant and clutch shots, and now the Lakers have a commanding 3-1 series lead. 

Walker shot 6 of 9 from the field in the 4th quarter of Game 4, including the go ahead jumper with 1:53 remaining in the game which gave the Purple and Gold a 100-99 lead. “It just comes with a lot of confidence, it’s probably a difficult shot for others, but it really isn’t a difficult shot for me,” explained Walker postgame. 

With Walker shooting himself into Laker playoff lore, LeBron James and Anthony Davis embraced him for a group hug to celebrate the monumental victory. He became the first Laker off the bench with 15 points in the fourth quarter of a playoff game since Kobe Bryant achieved the feat 26 years ago. 

One final note on Lonnie Walker IV before recapping the thrilling action, Lakers coach Darvin Ham deserves credit for having faith in the Dead eye shooter, inserting him in crunch time. 

The Lakers, after starting 2-10, are on the verge

of advancing to the Western Conference Finals. They would also dethrone the reigning NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the process. 

With the Warriors’ facing the prospect of being down 3-1,  reigning NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Steph Curry delivered a triple-double performance. Curry not only scored a game-high 31 points, but he dished out his 2023 playoff-high 14 assists while grabbing 10 rebounds.

LeBron James with a sky hook

It was a performance for the ages- universally recognized as the game’s greatest shooter, his pinpoint passing combined with his crafty moves solidifies  him as one of the games greatest point guards of all time. 

 James scored 27 points and Anthony Davis had 23 points and 15 rebounds for the seventh-seeded Lakers, earning their eighth consecutive home victory since March.

The Warriors led by 12 late in the third quarter, but the Lakers chased down the champs and finished them with Walker leading the way. 

Davis, who blocked 11 shots in the first three games, wasn’t able to protect the rim with the same ferocity when his defensive matchups required him to go out to the perimeter, and the Warriors capitalized with 52 points in the paint.

It was a testament to the power of celebrity in Tinsel Town. Showtime is back!

 Jack Nicholson returned to his courtside seats for the second time in their last three home games. The Lakers’ 86-year-old superfan headlined another celebrity-studded crowd including Chris Pratt, Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, Dave Chappelle, Dustin Hoffman, Kim Kardashian, Colin Jost and Flea.

Game 5 is in San Francisco at Chase Center on Wednesday, May 10. The Warriors backs are against the wall. Tipoff is 7:00 pm.