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Brittney Griner speaks publicly for first time since return home

Brittney Griner speaks to the media for the first time since returning home from wrongful imprisonment in Russia. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Brittney Griner sat behind a microphone, her gold wedding ring on her left hand, a barely touched bottle of water sitting to her right. She sported a short, cropped haircut, a shirt that read “Bring our Families Home” and a smile.

After spending 294 days in Russian detainment on drug charges, Griner returned to the United States in December through a prisoner swap. On Thursday, the Phoenix Mercury center spoke to the public for the first time, touching on her journey, basketball and her fight to help other wrongful detainees return home during a press conference before WNBA training camp opens next week.

There were tears during the conversation, like when Griner addressed the resilience that kept her going when she was in Russia.

“I’m no stranger to hard times,” she said. “Just digging deep, honestly. You are going to be faced with adversities throughout your life. This was a pretty big one.”

But mostly, the press conference was full of smiles and laughs, with Griner’s self-described “jokester” personality on full display.

She called 40-year-old teammate Diana Taurasi a “walking fossil” and teased her wife Cherelle, saying that the first thing she did when she touched a basketball again was to dunk on Cherelle.

Griner’s ability to share emotions, while staying poised and answering difficult questions, truly showed the resilience she described. Griner endured conditions that others can’t even begin to imagine during her 10 months in Russian prison, yet the 32-year-old has managed to stay true to herself and the qualities that have long endeared the WNBA veteran to the basketball community.

During those 10 months, Griner said the little things kept her going. When she felt hopeless, she looked at photos of her family. She read letters and she heard about the various displays of support that were happening back home — such as fans at a Mercury game giving Cherelle a standing ovation and WNBA players wearing Griner’s No. 42 jersey in the second half of the All-Star Game.

Those things gave her hope, which stirred up mixed emotions.

“It made me a little bit more comfortable,” she said. “It made me have a little bit of hope, which is a hard thing to have, a really dangerous thing to have. Because when it doesn’t work, it’s so crushing. I would say to everyone who is wrongfully detained right now, across the world, ‘Stay strong. Keep fighting. Don’t give up.’”

That’s what Griner’s “Bring Our Families Home” shirt is about: “Campaigns to bring attention to the individuals being wrongfully detained overseas and calls on the White House to take immediate decisive action to #bringthemhome,” the organization’s website reads.

Griner and the Mercury will be partnering with Bring Our Families Home throughout the season. The WNBA star wants to use her platform and following to bring awareness to other detainees who don’t have the same reach.

The Mercury will have a letter-writing station at their games, where fans can send their support to people in wrongful imprisonment, just like they did for Griner.

“You don‘t understand how good it felt to get a letter from your family, from random people that I’ve never even met,” Griner said. “It just lets you know that you’re not forgotten. And it’s easy to feel forgotten, to feel like no one is thinking of you. And then you get a letter from people that you know and people that you don’t even know. It does something to you. It gives you a spark of life, to keep holding on, keep fighting and not to give in.”

As for basketball, it’s a process. Griner says simple things, “like doing a plank,” are much harder than they were before her imprisonment, when she closed out the 2021 season in the WNBA Finals against the Chicago Sky.

“As an athlete, you always want to be where you left off,” she said. “And I left off the playoffs, Finals, Chicago, and I wanted to be that player when I started back.”

Griner’s family, teammates and coaches have reminded her to give herself grace, and to understand that getting back to the player she was will take time. As frustrating as that is for Griner, it also gives her a sense of excitement and something to work toward.

“It’s liberating as well, just as a release, getting back to my craft and then being here in Phoenix,” she said.

Eden Laase is a Staff Writer at Just Women’s Sports. Follow her on Twitter @eden_laase.

UNC Standout Deja Kelly Announces Transfer to Oregon

deja kelly playing for unc
Deja Kelly will take her talents to Eugene this fall. (Eakin Howard/Getty Images)

Deja Kelly has landed on her final destination, with the former North Carolina star announcing her commitment to Oregon on Monday. 

A three-time All-ACC guard, Kelly averaged 15.4 points, 3.5 rebounds, and 3.0 assists per game in her four years in Chapel Hill. She led the team in scoring in each of the last three seasons, but opted to transfer elsewhere for her fifth and final year of NCAA eligibility.

The 5-foot-8 Texas native finishes her UNC career eighth on the team’s scoring list, having helped carry the Tar Heels to a Sweet 16 in 2022

Kelly is the seventh new addition for Oregon Ducks coach Kelly Graves this offseason, as the program faced a number of big name departures at the close of the 2023 NCAA tournament. She will join Texas' Amina Muhammad, Arizona's Salimatou Kourouma, Washington's Ari Long, BYU's Nani Falatea, UC Santa Barbara's Alexis Whitfield, and Siena's Elisa Mevius in Eugene this fall.

Kelly wasn't the only noteworthy transfer shaking up women's college hoops this week, with Marquette's Liza Karlen and Pitt's Liatu King both announcing their commitments to Notre Dame within a span of roughly 18 hours.

San Diego to Face Utah Without Morgan, Girma in Midweek NWSL Match

alex morgan of san diego wave
Alex Morgan has been sidelined with an ankle knock since late April. (Nathan Ray Seebeck-USA TODAY Sports)

The San Diego Wave are without some key players, and they don’t expect to get them back anytime soon. 

Alex Morgan, Sofia Jakobsson, Melanie Barcenas, Abby Dahlkemper, and Naomi Girma are all currently on the team’s injury list. On Monday, head coach Casey Stoney was asked if she expected any of them to return to the pitch in the near future. 

"No, unfortunately not," was her response. The Wave is set to play Utah on Wednesday.

While Stoney hasn't yet provided anything else definitive, absences from Morgan and Girma leave behind a pretty big hole in the team roster, particularly with the Olympics — not to mention the preceding USWNT send-off friendlies — just around the corner. Morgan has been sidelined with ankle trouble since the team's late April match against Orlando, while Girma’s first game on the injury list was against Seattle. 

Stoney, however, has said that the Wave doesn’t play any differently with or without the missing players.

"It doesn’t really affect the way we play," she said following the team’s recent loss to Seattle. "We just needed to have more patience. We still had some senior players out there tonight that could have impacted that and needed to impact that and did in the second half."

San Diego currently sits in 10th place with seven points, having won two games in their last five matches.

Angel Reese, Serena Williams Light Up Met Gala Red Carpet

wnba star angel reese at the 2024 met gala
√a. (Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images for The Mark Hotel)

Angel Reese celebrated her 22nd birthday in style, turning out for the Met Gala. 

The Chicago Sky rookie wore a custom dress by British label 16Arlington. Reese is just the second WNBA player to ever grace the Met Gala carpet, following Brittney Griner's appearance last year.

"I’m just excited to see everyone’s outfits. Everyone looks amazing in here. Being here on my 22nd birthday is amazing," Reese told WWD ahead of the event. "I feel beautiful and I feel sexy."

She later took to Twitter, writing that "being able to play the game I love & live my dream in the fashion world all on my 22nd birthday is a blessing."

Reese wasn’t the only women's sports athlete to grace the Met Gala this year. Rolex Women's World Golf Ranking No. 1 Nelly Korda arrived as a guest of Wasserman Media Group chairperson Casey Wasserman, making her the first LPGA golfer to attend the event. Korda wore Oscar de la Renta

Former host and red carpet regular Serena Williams showed up in a gold Balenciaga gown. She reunited with tennis great Maria Sharapova at the event, while sister Venus Williams was also in attendance.

This year's Met Gala theme was "Garden of Time."

Sky Rookie Kamilla Cardoso out “four to six weeks” with shoulder injury

kamilla cardoso just for the ball in a preseason game between chicago sky and minnesota lynx
Cardoso could miss up to 13 games, depending on her recovery timeline. (David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images)

Kamilla Cardoso will not make her regular season WNBA debut with the Chicago Sky for some time, with the Chicago Sun-Times reporting Monday that she's expected to be sidelined for four to six weeks with a shoulder injury. 

The No. 3 overall pick in last month’s WNBA Draft suffered the knock in the team’s preseason game this past Friday. She hasn’t fully participated in practice since, and will await reevaluation while undergoing recovery measures. 

That timeline means that she won't be suiting up for the team’s May 15th season opener, with her potential return estimated around June 17th. Depending on her status, Cardoso might miss up to 13 games total, an absence that could have a serious impact on team development.

Fellow Sky rookie Bryanna Maxwell — drafted by Chicago No. 13 overall this year — will also be out three to four weeks with a knee injury.

"They’re working their butts off to get better and get themselves back into it," Sky head coach Teresa Weatherspoon told Sun-Times reporter Annie Costabile. "This is a long season. We want to make sure we take care of each player."

Cardoso is coming off of an undefeated NCAA national championship run with South Carolina, where she was named the Final Four’s Most Outstanding Player. A two-time national champion, the 6-foot-7 center racked up six points and four rebounds in 13 minutes of Friday's 92-81 loss to the Lynx before exiting the game due to injury.

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