Home US SportsWNBA Every WNBA team’s biggest question mark heading into training camp

Every WNBA team’s biggest question mark heading into training camp

by
Every WNBA team’s biggest question mark heading into training camp

The WNBA Draft is over. Most of the top free agents are signed. The result? A league that looks both similar and wildly different than last season. The top teams should still be the top teams, but a number of good players have moved to new homes, leading to plenty of questions about where each team is currently at.

Based on everything that’s happened this offseason, here’s the biggest question facing each WNBA team in the league as training camp approaches.

Advertisement

Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

On paper, swapping out Brittney Griner for Angel Reese feels like a good move. The fit between Brionna Jones and Griner last year always felt off, and that showed up prominently in the numbers.

Lineup

Net Rating

Jones ON, Griner OFF

+17.89

Griner ON, Jones OFF

+4.08

Jones ON, Griner ON

-2.74

Subbing Reese in for Griner doens’t necessarily help as far as spacing goes – you still have two non-shooting bigs in the frontcourt – but Reese at least brings some ball-handling skills, which gives the Dream more options as far as making the offense works goes. Overall, the team could really use more consistent shooting, but at least as far as a one-for-one swap in the frontcourt goes, I think I’d rather have Reese than Griner. That’s not to say this will work, but it at least could work.

Advertisement

Chicago Sky: Does Skylar Diggins make them contenders?

Skylar Diggins

Seattle Storm guard Skylar Diggins | Candice Ward-Imagn Images

I’ve talked plenty about how the Chicago Sky front office is one of, if not the, worst in the WNBA. The team traded Angel Reese away for two first-round picks, which sounds good on the surface, but those are likely to be very late firsts that almost certainly won’t bring value equal to Reese. They also traded their own future first for Jacy Sheldon, another baffling move.

But the team did get one thing right: when Skylar Diggins said she wanted to play there, they signed her. Diggins should give the Sky a shot to make the playoffs and the additions of Rickea Jackson and Azura Stevens will help round out this roster, but I think that even with Diggins, the backcourt still needs another high-end player for this team to be a

Advertisement

Leila Lacan
Connecticut Sun guard Leila Lacan | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

Brittney Griner, Olivia Nelson-Ododa, Aneesah Morrow and Aaliyah Edwards make up the Connecticut Sun frontcourt. It’s not a perfect group, but there’s clearly talent there. The backcourt, though, is a different story.

Leila Lacan, Saniya Rivers and rookie Gianna Kneepkens headline that position group, and it’s pretty clear that Connecticut’s best bet here is just to lose a bunch of games and hope it can draft JuJu Watkins in 2027. I like Lacan and Rivers, but that’s not a playoff-caliber backcourt. Meanwhile, Kneepkens is an elite 3-point shooter, but her lack of creation skills on a team that’s badly in need of creation skills might lead to her falling behind players like Shey Peddy or even fellow rookie Charlisse Leger-Walker in the rotation.

Advertisement

Dallas Wings: What is Azzi Fudd’s role?

Azzi Fudd

Azzi Fudd who was selected first overall by the Dallas Wings | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

I have some serious questions about Azzi Fudd in Dallas. I get why the team added her – she has pre-existing chemistry with your other young star and also has a chance to be the best pure shooter in the league – but it’s just not clear what her current role in Dallas is going to be.

Do you start her at…small forward? Or start her at shooting guard with Arike Ogunbowale at small forward? That’s a small group, and while Fudd is a great off-ball defender, you lack a great on-ball one in this scenario. Could the team bring Fudd off the bench? Maybe, but who starts at the three? Maddy Siegrist? Alysha Clark? Seeing what the Wings starting lineup is on opening night will be fascinating.

Advertisement

Kayla Thornton
Golden State Valkyries forward Kayla Thornton | Kelley L Cox-Imagn Images

Signing Gabby Williams was a pretty strong move, but while Williams is a good player, she’s struggled to shoot from deep. While she’s improved a bit, her career-high mark from 3-point range is just 32.3 percent.

I love the defensive upside of her and Kayla Thornton at the three and four, but I worry spacing becomes a concern. Add in a deeper league now, and could last year’s expansion darlings end up backsliding out of the playoff race?

Caitlin Clark

Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark | David Butler II-Imagn Images

Even with Caitlin Clark sidelined for much of the season, the Indiana Fever made a postseason run thanks to the play of Kelsey Mitchell. In theory, adding a healthy Clark back should make the Fever into contenders, right?

Advertisement

It depends on which Clark we get. The one who looked pro-ready right off the bat as a rookie? Yeah. that Clark makes the Fever a title threat, but the Clark we saw in her 13 games last season? That version is tougher to project.

FG%

3P%

PPG

2024

41.7

34.4

19.2

2025

36.7

27.9

16.5

Clark should look like her 2024 self if healthy, but it’s not a guarantee. Indiana’s title hopes hang in the balance here.

Jewell Loyd

Las Vegas Aces guard Jewell Loyd | Joe Rondone/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

There were times in 2025 when Jewell Loyd looked completely out of her depths in Las Vegas. Her shot was off, and she wasn’t contributing to team success. Then she was moved to a reserve role and suddenly came alive.

Games

FG%

3P%

Starter

25

36.3

35.4

Reserve

19

42.3

40.9

The Aces are less deep this season, though, so a return to the starting lineup might make sense. If that’s the case, though, will Loyd regress back to her 2025 starter numbers? The Aces can’t afford that, especially now that Aaliyah Nye is in Toronto, which takes away some of the team’s shooting upside.

Advertisement

Nneka Ogwumike

Los Angeles Sparks forward Nneka Ogwumike | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Sparks have brought back franchise legend Nneka Ogwumike, but will that mean this team will get back to the postseason for the first time since 2020?

I’d say…probably? The team has to figure out who starts at the three and how to balance having both Ogwumike and Cameron Brink at the five, but after also adding Ariel Atkins, this is probably the most talented Sparks team we’ve seen in a good while. Depth is a bit concerning, especially in the frontcourt, but this team should have enough to make playoff return.

Napheesa Collier

Minnesota Lynx forward Napheesa Collier | Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

The Lynx have re-signed Napheesa Collier to a one-year deal at the new supermax, but when will we actually see Collier on the floor? That remains the biggest question heading into the season.

Advertisement

See, Collier had surgery on both ankles earlier this year, and it’s really unclear where she is in the recovery timeline. In late March, she was spotted using a scooter with her left leg still in a cast.

Source link

You may also like