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Collier, Reeve Earn 2024 WNBA Awards

Napheesa Collier of the Minnesota Lynx accepts the 2024 WNBA Defensive Player of the Year award from WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert.
Napheesa Collier is just the second Lynx player to win WNBA Defensive Player of the Year. (Jordan Johnson/NBAE via Getty Images)

Just before the 2024 WNBA semifinals tipped off on Sunday, Minnesota Lynx forward Napheesa Collier won the Defensive Player of the Year (DPOY) award while head coach Cheryl Reeve earned both Coach (COY) and Executive of the Year (EOY).

Collier snags WNBA Defensive Player of the Year award

In perhaps the season's most-debated WNBA award race, Collier emerged with 36 of the 67 votes to take the 2024 DPOY title. As just the second Minnesota player to ever win it, joining Lynx legend Sylvia Fowles, who took him the title twice while playing with the club.

Collier led the league's second-best defensive team this season by holding her opponents to just 36.2% in field goal shooting, better than any other player in the WNBA this year. On top of that, she posted career highs in steals, rebounds, and blocks.

Las Vegas's A'ja Wilson shoots the ball over fellow 2024 WNBA Defensive Player of the Year contender, Minnesota's Napheesa Collier.
Both A'ja Wilson and Napheesa Collier were favorites for the 2024 WNBA DPOY award. (Ben Brewer/Getty Images)

"I think it's just having that overall aggression on both sides of the ball," Collier said in response to her win. "We always are saying defense leads the offense because it lets you get in transition and it lets you push the pace. It lets you get the other team on their heels, so we take a lot of pride in our defense and it's something that obviously I've worked hard to improve because I know it's what's best for the team."

Las Vegas's 2024 WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson — who won DPOY in 2022 and 2023 — finished second with 26 votes, while Seattle's Ezi Magbegor came in third with three votes.

The WNBA also released its 2024 All-Defensive Teams on Sunday, with Collier, Wilson, and Magbegor joining Connecticut's DiJonai Carrington and New York's Breanna Stewart on the first team.

Cheryl Reeve is handed her 2024 WNBA COY award on Sunday.
Cheryl Reeve is the only WNBA coach to win four COY awards. (David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images)

Lynx boss Reeve honored with 2024 WNBA Coach and Executive awards

Having led Minnesota to the best post-Olympic break record in the league — and after guiding Team USA to an eighth-straight gold medal — Reeve caps her 2024 WNBA season with a record-breaking fourth Coach of the Year award.

Claiming 62 of the 67 available COY votes, Reeve ran away with the 2024 title. The league-leading Liberty's boss, Sandy Brondello, garnered four votes, with Fever coach Christie Sides earning a the final nod for taking Indiana to their first playoffs since 2016.

On top of her sideline success, Reeve's front office prowess also snagged the head coach 2024 Executive of the Year honors. She joins recently ousted LA Sparks manager Curt Miller as the only individuals to win both awards in the same season.

Minnesota Lynx head coach Cheryl Reeve talks to Natisha Hiedeman during a WNBA game against the Indiana Fever at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
Reeve has won WNBA Coach of the Year four times over her 14 seasons with the Lynx. (Emilee Chinn/Getty Images)

Much of Reeve's 2024 managerial success has been attributed to key signings and trades earlier this year. Reeve added shot-maker Courtney Williams and sharpshooter Alanna Smith during the offseason's WNBA free agency window, and traded for clutch bench player Myisha Hines-Allen just last month.

All three have been integral to Minnesota's 2024 success.

Reeve, however, denies any grand master plan in concocting that success, explaining simply, "You work hard. You do the things that you think are the best path for your team. Sometimes you get lucky and you get lightning in a bottle, as they say. And that's what this team is."

Big Ten Underdogs Aim for Sweet 16 Upsets in 2025 NCAA Volleyball Tournament

A general view of the Stanford's Maples Pavilion before a 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament game.
No. 2-seed Stanford will face No. 3-seed Wisconsin in the Sweet Sixteen round of the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament. (Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

With half of the Elite Eight now set, a few Big Ten underdogs still have a shot at disrupting the No. 1 seed stronghold at the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament this weekend.

The No. 3-seed Purdue Boilermakers are through to the quarterfinals after defeating No. 2-seed SMU 3-1 on Thursday, while the No. 4-seed Indiana Hoosiers, No. 3 seed-Wisconsin Badgers, and the still-undefeated overall No. 1 seed Nebraska Cornhuskers all face stiff Sweet Sixteen competition on Friday afternoon.

Coming off a strong regular season, the Big Ten could still field half of the quarterfinal round — though that would require the first No. 1-seed upset of the 2025 national tournament in the form of an Indiana victory over top-seeded Texas.

Bolstered by their defensive leader, senior middle blocker Madi Sell, the Hoosiers booked just their second-ever Sweet Sixteen trip with last week's win over No. 5 Colorado, with Indiana now hoping their lucky run continues against the 2022 and 2023 champion Longhorns.

Meanwhile, the No. 1 Huskers will look to keep rolling against No. 4-seed Kansas while the No. 3 Badgers aim to snag another Big Ten spot in the Elite Eight by ousting No. 2-seed Stanford on Friday.

How to watch the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament this weekend

The NCAA volleyball tournament's Sweet Sixteen action will wrap with four games on Friday, starting with No. 1 Texas vs. No. 4 Indiana at 12 PM ET.

The Elite Eight will then meet at the net on Saturday and Sunday to determine the last-standing teams heading to next week's Final Four in Kansas City.

All of this weekend's NCAA tournament games will air live across ESPN platforms.

Team USA Eyes 2025 Rivalry Series Sweep Against Canada Women’s Hockey

Team USA hockey players Britta Curl-Salemme, Cayla Barnes, Abbey Murphy, and Hannah Bilka celebrate a goal during the third game of the 2025 Rivalry Series against Canada.
The USA has taken a commanding 3-0 lead in the four-game 2025 Rivalry Series against Team Canada. (Leila Devlin/Getty Images)

Team USA is on a roll, officially taking the four-game 2025 Rivalry Series against Canada before the slate of friendlies is even over, with the US collecting three consecutive wins so far — and one shot left at making it a clean sweep.

The US downed their northern neighbors by a commanding 10-4 scoreline in Edmonton on Wednesday, marking Team USA's first-ever 10-goal victory against the reigning Olympic champs — all while upping the 2025 series' goal tally to 20-6.

While each team fine-tunes rosters ahead of the 2026 Olympics, one test remains for both international hockey titans before the Winter Games take the ice in February.

"The work doesn't stop. Our Olympic team is not named. There's still one more game to go," said USA captain Kendall Coyne Schofield, acknowledging that her squad is not taking their foot off the gas despite the recent lopsided results.

"We have one more game against them before the Olympics," echoed Canada captain Marie-Philip Poulin. "We're all aware of that."

How to watch Team USA vs. Canada in the 2025 Rivalry Series

The puck drops on the final match of the sixth annual hockey Rivalry Series between the USA and Canada in Edmonton, Alberta, on Saturday.

Live coverage of the clash will begin at 9 PM ET on the NHL Network.

Nations League Win Keeps Spain at No. 1 in Latest FIFA Women’s Soccer Rankings

Spain players celebrate with attacker Vicky López after her goal during the 2025 Nations League final
Spain earned their second straight Nations League title earlier this month. (Diego Souto/Getty Images)

The latest FIFA women's soccer rankings dropped on Thursday, with Spain widening their lead at No. 1 after winning a second consecutive UEFA Nations League title earlier this month.

The USWNT held steady at No. 2, ceding 7.48 points after losing an October friendly to No. 22 Portugal before going on to secure four straight wins over Portugal, No. 35 New Zealand, and No. 13 Italy to close out 2025.

Elsewhere in the FIFA Top 10, No. 3 Germany and No. 6 Brazil both saw boosts after successful fall runs, while Canada skidded to No. 10 amid a recent five-match winless streak, with Les Rouges's last victory coming against No. 43 Costa Rica last June.

The biggest changes, however, occurred outside the top ranks, as No. 96 Nicaragua, No. 118 Burkina Faso, and No. 137 American Samoa all rose by 16 spots.

Notably, upcoming USWNT opponent Paraguay saw the largest drop in this month's Top 50, sliding five spots to No. 46.

Ultimately, as the USWNT battled to keep pace in a year of roster experimentation — and without a major competition on the team's 2025 docket — the many international competitions in Europe benefitted victors and challenged losers in this week's FIFA rankings update.

No. 16 USC Hosts No. 1 UConn in NCAA Basketball Weekend Headliner

USC senior guard Kara Dunn high-fives freshman Jazzy Davidson during a 2025/26 NCAA basketball game.
USC earned their second ranked win of the 2025/26 NCAA basketball season against No. 20 Washington last weekend. (Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The No. 16 USC Trojans are gearing up for another top-ranked test, hosting the reigning national champion No. 1 UConn Huskies in the weekend's flashiest NCAA women's basketball matchup on Saturday.

Coming off their second ranked win of the season, USC topped No. 20 Washington 59-50 last Sunday, with 22 points and 12 rebounds from freshman Jazzy Davidson helping pull the Trojans to a 7-2 record.

"I saw a resolve in our team," said head coach Lindsay Gottlieb afterwards. "I knew we could get the next stop, I knew we could get the next play."

USC will face a particularly familiar foe against the Huskies — this time without sidelined star junior JuJu Watkins — after UConn knocked the Trojans out of the NCAA tournament two years in a row.

Notably, sophomore guard Kayleigh Heckel departed USC over the summer for the Huskies, with the former Trojan averaging 7.7 points per game entering Saturday's clash with her old team.

"I just try to take one game at a time, but I'm excited to go back," Heckel said ahead of her first trip back to LA since transferring. "I had a great freshman year there, and I learned a lot, and it was a great experience, a lot of fond memories. So I'm looking forward to it."

How to watch No. 1 UConn vs. No. 16 USC on Saturday

The Trojans will host the Huskies with tip-off set for 5:30 PM ET on Saturday.

Live coverage of the clash will air on FOX.