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Nancy Lieberman says Sue Bird, Megan Rapinoe are ‘living the dream’

(Patrick McDermott/Getty Images)

Basketball trailblazer Nancy Lieberman stopped by the most recent episode of “Off the Looking Glass” and spoke with hosts Kate Fagan and Jessica Smetana about the evolution of women’s sports since her playing days.

At approximately the 26:20 mark of the podcast, Lieberman says she recently had a conversation with friend and former girlfriend Martina Navratilova about the cultural changes around LGBTQ+ acceptance in women’s sports.

“Everybody looks at [Sue] Bird and Megan [Rapinoe], and they can live their life and be who they organically are,” Lieberman said. “And we caught so much s–t in like 1980-81 because everybody was like, ‘Holy crap’. [Now] people are like, ‘Oh my gosh, talk about a power couple.’”

Lieberman, 63, went on to discuss the difficulties surrounding her relationship with Navratilova in the 1980s. Their celebrities at the time, she says, only exacerbated the issues; Navratilova was at the height of her tennis career and Lieberman was fresh off of a dominant four years at Old Dominion, where she became the first two-time winner of the Wade Trophy, an award given to the best player in women’s college basketball.

In 1981, Navratilova came out as bisexual in an interview with the New York Daily News. Soon after, she and Lieberman discussed the negative public perception of their decision to move in together in an interview with the Dallas Morning News. In it, Lieberman identified as straight.

“It was so difficult to lie and to hide, because of acceptance back in the early ‘80s,” she told Fagan and Smetana. “And we look here and we’re like, ‘How cool is that for them? They have no clue. They’re just living the dream.’ But that’s where our country has gone to in an amazing way.”

Lieberman also discussed the growth of women’s sports and how it’s allowed for diversity to flourish in leagues like the WNBA.

“It was a difficult time for a lot of women,” she said. “There was a pie, but the pie was so small. I had the majority of that pie. Cheryl Miller had the majority of that pie, or Ann Meyers. And what happened within the women’s community, as we know, people were jealous because they worked just as hard as us.

“And now, the thing that makes me so happy is that this pie is so big. And a lot of people, in a lot of sports, have it.”

2025 Expansion Team Golden State Valkyries Break WNBA Attendance Record

Golden State Valkyries mascot Violet the Raven sits in the splits on the court while firing a T-shirt gun into a sellout Chase Center crowd during a 2025 WNBA game.
The Golden State Valkyries have sold out every home game in the WNBA team's inaugural 2025 season. (Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images)

The Golden State Valkyries have made WNBA history yet again, setting a new league attendance record by selling out all 22 of the 2025 expansion team's home games this year — and doing so in their debut season.

Even more, the WNBA surpassed the 3 million-fan mark over the weekend, an historic first for the 29-year-old league.

A hit from the very first tip-off, the Valkyries have seen unprecedented support while becoming the first-ever expansion team to make the WNBA playoffs in their inaugural year.

Making the announcement in their final 2025 regular-season home stand against the Minnesota Lynx on Saturday, the Valkyries have officially seen fans fill every one of the Chase Center's maximum 18,064 seats all season — claiming a WNBA all-time record for any team's per-game average along the way.

With those season-long record crowds, Golden State also now owns the WNBA total attendance mark at 397,408 fans on the year.

Just behind Golden State are the Indiana Fever and New York Liberty — the only other WNBA teams that will close out the 2025 regular-season with average crowds over 16,000 and totals breaking the 300,000-fan mark.

With one home game still left to play for each team, Indiana has welcomed 349,313 total fans so far, while New York currently sits at a 341,575 total attendance for the 2025 WNBA season.

Attendance has skyrocketed across the WNBA year, thanks in part to the league adding both a 13th franchise as well as two more home games to each team's 2025 schedule.

As a result, the league demolished the previous season-high attendance of 2.36 million set in 2002 and, with 11 games still on the 2025 regular-season schedule, the WNBA is currently on track to push past the 3.1 million mark before the postseason tips off.

WNBA Titans Sylvia Fowles, Maya Moore, and Sue Bird Inducted into Hall of Fame

Retired WNBA legends Sylvia Fowles, Sue Bird, and Maya Moore hold their induction trophies at the 2025 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame ceremony.
2025 inductees Sylvia Fowles, Sue Bird, and Maya Moore entered the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on Saturday. (Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

Three retired WNBA icons received their flowers over the weekend, as Minnesota Lynx legends Sylvia Fowles and Maya Moore and Seattle Storm great Sue Bird took their places in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on Saturday — making the 2025 WNBA class arguably the most dominant in HOF history.

"Now that I'm in the Hall, I believe I have become Auntie Maya," Moore said in her enshrinement speech. "I want to challenge you up-and-comers to learn to love and seek out joy and connection as your biggest motivator."

With 11 Olympic gold medals — more than any other HOF group — and 10 league championships between them, plus countless individual honors, Fowles, Bird, and Moore comprise the strongest women's basketball Hall of Fame class in history.

Even more, this is the first year that the Naismith has added a full trio of WNBA players to its hallowed halls — a testament to the unmatched careers of Bird, Moore, and Fowles.

"Put us on a 3×3 team, you'd have some problems — we'd be pretty good," Bird joked. "It is pretty special to go in with people who aren't just amazing players, having impact on and off the court, but these are players that I got to experience life with."

"I think that would be fair to say that they would have the title of best class ever," Minnesota head coach Cheryl Reeve said.

Orlando Pride Falls to Chicago Stars as NWSL Skid Continues

Orlando Pride goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse watches from the ground as Chicago Stars forwards Ludmila and Ally Schlegel celebrate a goal during a 2025 NWSL match.
The No. 5 Orlando Pride fell 5-2 to the No. 13 Chicago Stars on Sunday. (Daniel Bartel/NWSL via Getty Images)

The 2025 NWSL season for the No. 5 Orlando Pride has taken a sharp downturn, as the reigning league champions are now winless in their last seven games following Sunday's 5-2 loss to the No. 13 Chicago Stars at Northwestern University's Martin Stadium.

While left back Carson Pickett and defensive midfielder Haley McCutcheon each managed to take a goal back for the Pride, a leaky Orlando back line saw five different Stars players hit the back of the net — including a 10th goal on the season for Chicago star striker Ludmila.

"I apologize to the fans that were watching at home, and I apologize to the fans that were here with their support. That was not us today and we have to get it right," Pride head coach Seb Hines said following the match.

Orlando have continued to slide down the NWSL standings since their last win on June 13th, most recently logging three straight losses as the team struggles to find their form following MVP candidate Barbra Banda's season-ending injury on August 16th.

One of the Pride's rare bright spots on Sunday was record-breaking signee Lizbeth Ovalle, with the Mexican international subbing in at the half to make her NWSL debut.

Chicago, on the other hand, hasn't dropped a match since returning from the midseason summer break, with the surging Stars putting on a Sunday show in their impending lakefront home.

"I feel like it's just a really cool atmosphere, a lot more people can come now, and it's really good vibes," midfielder Julia Grosso said after the match.

Chicago Sky Suspends Angel Reese Over ‘Tribune’ Comments

Chicago Sky guards Hailey Van Lith and Ariel Atkins, as well as forward Angel Reese, watch from the the bench during a 2025 WNBA game.
Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese spent Sunday's matchup against Las Vegas on the bench. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

No. 12 Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese rode the bench against the No. 2 Las Vegas Aces on Sunday night, serving a team-issued half-game suspension levied in the wake of the WNBA sophomore's controversial Chicago Tribune interview last week.

"The Chicago Sky values the safety, respect, and well-being of every player. We are committed to accountability so our players can stay focused on playing basketball," the team said in a statement, sanctioning Reese for making what they dubbed "statements detrimental to the team."

Reese served her suspension during the first half of Sunday's 80-66 loss to Las Vegas, before remaining sidelined for the game's second half due a lingering back injury.

Sunday marked Chicago's second straight matchup without the star forward, as Reese previously missed the Sky's Friday clash with the No. 7 Indiana Fever due to technical foul accumulation.

In the aforementioned Tribune interview, Reese criticized the franchise's roster construction, point guard development, and ability to attract free agents in the article, causing a stir across the Chicago Sky organization and beyond.

Chicago Sky head coach Tyler Marsh said on Friday that the decision to issue Reese a suspension came from the "top down," and that the team was "just going to handle it internally."

"She has a big influence, whether she says something good or bad, people like to interpret it a certain way," Sky center Elizabeth Williams told the Chicago Sun-Times last week. "I think she understands she just has to be mindful of the language she uses."

How to watch Angel Reese and the Chicago Sky this week

Reese has two more chances to suit up for the Sky this year, with Chicago closing out their 2025 WNBA season by facing the No. 2 Las Vegas Aces again before hosting the reigning champion No. 5 New York Liberty.

The Sky will tip off against the Aces at 10 PM ET on Tuesday, with live coverage on WNBA League Pass.

Thursday's season finale vs. the Libs will begin at 8 PM ET, airing live on NBA TV.

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