On Wednesday night, three of the WNBA’s five teams with .500 record will take the court, with the Indiana Fever hosting the Portland Fire (7 p.m. ET, USA Network) and the Dallas Wings visiting the 3-1 Chicago Sky (9 p.m. ET, USA Network).
That one third of the league is hovering at 2-2 indicates the league’s parity in a season marked by a compacted offseason, new roster-building parameters, officiating points of emphases and two more expansion teams.
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Or, does it? Is this overall averageness the status quo that will extend through the 2026 season? Will teams, instead, begin to establish separation, with clearer tiers emerging between teams that, at least at the moment, sport similar records?
The matchup between the Fever and Fire leans toward the latter.
Indiana has a net rating of +5.2, which is superior to the team’s season-long net rating for the 2025 season of +4.5. Portland is at -9.0. Put another way, the Fever have outscored their opponents by 15 points over the course of their four games, while the Fire have been outscored by 30 points. Indy’s two losses have come by a combined five points, with both nearly going into overtime; Portland’s two wins were by even slimmer margins, with a two-point victory over the New York Liberty and a one-point win over the Connecticut Sun.
All that data suggests the squads’ matching records are quite deceiving.
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So, is a relatively easy win in order for Indiana on Wednesday night, especially since it looks like Aliyah Boston will be back in the lineup? Or, do the Fire have something special? Can Portland conjure up another close win, making a case that coming through at the right moments, rather than margin of victory, is what really matters?
Share you analysis and expectations in the comments, as well as those about the contest between the Sky and Wings.
It was beginning to look it Chicago was actually a good team, with a league-leading 97.2 defensive rating helping to secure their 3-1 start. But after the loss of Rickea Jackson to a season-ending ACL injury, on top of the team’s other lingering injuries, Chicago ability to sustain their successful start seems shaky.
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Shaky, certainly, described the execution of the Wings during stretches of their first three games of the season, leading to a 1-2 mark. On Monday night, however, Dallas put together a complete performance, registering an offensive rating of 124.3 in their domination of the Washington Mystics. It was the third-best single-game offensive performance by any team this season.
Which team will win this contrast of styles?
Can Chicago, finally playing at home, show off their improved defense for the Windy City? Or, will Dallas prove that their offense is for real, with the Wings lighting up the wounded Sky?
