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Brittney Griner’s best strategy may be guilty plea, legal expert says

(Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP via Getty Images)

WNBA star Brittney Griner’s trial is set begin Friday in a Russian court, and an international law expert says it might be best for her to plead guilty.

More than 99 percent of Russian court cases result in a conviction.

“It’s a fantasy for average Russians. It’s a double fantasy for someone in this sort of political case,” William Pomeranz, a Russian law expert and acting director of the Wilson Center’s Kennan Institute in Washington, told ESPN. “It’s a foregone conclusion and the trial is to uphold the state and confirm the power of the state.”

Griner has been detained in Russia since February. She was taken into custody in a Moscow airport for alleged possession of hashish oil.

The added political factors in her case – the United States deems Griner to be “wrongfully detained” and is working toward her release – and the fact that she will not receive a trial by jury tip the odds even further in favor of a conviction.

The trial, according to legal experts, should be seen as a negotiation tactic by Russia, which is aiming to push the Biden administration into a prisoner trade in exchange for Griner’s freedom.

“The trial — and the threat of a long sentence — gives the Russians more negotiating leverage,” said Danielle Gilbert, an assistant professor of military and strategic studies at the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Experts also say that any deal to release Griner likely would require an admission of guilt from the WNBA star. While a guilty plea could create difficulties for the U.S. State Department and the White House, experts told ESPN that the guilty plea could make life more bearable for Griner during her detention — and increase the likelihood of the two sides striking a deal for her release.

“Traditionally, the best defense is to admit your guilt and hope you get a lesser sentence,” Pomeranz added. “There’s not a lot of examples of people raising strong defenses and getting acquitted.”

But her status in the United States could make it harder to negotiate for her release.

“The problem is Brittney, politically, is worth so much more in terms of the trading of prisoners than Trevor Reed because of her profile. So the ask is going to be much bigger, and I think the ask that they’ve been telegraphing in the Russian news is for Viktor Bout,” Kimberly St. Julian-Varnon, a Ph.D. student at Penn who is studying African American experiences in the Soviet Union, Ukraine and Russia, told the New York Times.

Cherelle Griner said in a radio interview Wednesday with the Rev. Al Sharpton said that her wife Brittney has described her state of mind in letters.

“She’s telling me she’s OK,” Cherelle Griner said of her wife’s letters. “She’s like, ‘I’m OK, babe. I’m hardened. I’m not me right now. When I come home, it’s going to take me a minute to get back to myself, but I’m holding on. I won’t break until I come home. I won’t let them break me. I know they are trying to, but I’m going to do my best to just hold on until I can get home.’”

Even as the trial starts Friday, the U.S. State Department is still actively working for Griner’s release.

“The United States government is actively engaged in trying to resolve this case and get Brittney home,” Jake Sullivan, Biden’s national security advisor, said Tuesday. “It has the fullest attention of the president and every senior member of his national security and diplomatic team. And we are actively working to find a resolution to this case and will continue to do so without rest until we get Brittney safely home.”

Team USA Outscores Canada to Open 2025 Rivalry Series

USA forward Taylor Heise takes the puck up the ice during a 2025 Rivalry Series game against Canada.
The USA outscored Canada 10-2 across their first two 2025 Rivalry Series games. (Rebecca Villagracia/Getty Images)

The USA women's hockey team came out on top over the weekend, kicking off the four-game 2025 Rivalry Series against Canada by dominating their northern neighbors, outscoring them by an impressive 10-2 margin across the pair's first two games.

US forward Abbey Murphy emerged as a series star, scoring a natural hat trick in the team's 4-1 win in Cleveland on Thursday — the first three-goal turn by a USA player against Canada since team captain Hilary Knight did so at the 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship.

"I told [Murphy], 'You set the bar pretty high,'" said Knight, who added her own hat trick to the mix in Saturday's 6-1 victory in Buffalo.

"I love how we showed up," the 36-year-old continued. "We've been working like dogs since August and to get rewarded for our work, and see situations that we need to work on."

Notably, while the USA brought their entire 2025 world championship-winning roster to the first two Rivalry Series games, Canada chose to evaluate some fresh faces while resting a number of standout veterans, including their No. 1 goaltender Ann-Renée Desbiens — a fact that should temper the sting of adding two big losses to their now four-game skid against the US.

With women's hockey taking over Milan at the 2026 Winter Olympics in February, the last two 2025 Rivalry Series matchups will more likely see both sides testing their final rosters for Italy.

How to watch the final games in the 2025 Rivalry Series

Canada will welcome the USA for the last two matchups in the 2025 Rivalry Series, with the puck dropping in Edmonton, Alberta, at 9 PM ET for both the December 10th and 13th clashes.

Both games will air live on the NHL Network.

WNBA Star Caitlin Clark Tees Off at The ANNIKA Pro-Am 2025

WNBA guard Caitlin Clark laughs with LPGA star Nelly Korda in the 2024 Pro-Am at The Annika tournament.
WNBA star Caitlin Clark will compete in The ANNIKA Pro-Am 2025 on Wednesday before world No. 2 golfer Nelly Korda begins her 2024 title defense at the tournament. (Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The LPGA is bringing star power to Florida this week, as a wealth of women's golf talent — and one basketball superstar — tee off at the 2025 edition of The ANNIKA.

Kicking off the event on Wednesday was the annual Pro-Am, with Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark headlining the field for the second straight year.

World No. 2 golfer Nelly Korda once again joined Clark through her first nine holes, as Fever teammates Sophie Cunningham and Lexie Hull served as guest caddies.

The four-day professional tournament will then tee off on Thursday, though current world No. 1 Jeeno Thitikul will not be in attendance for the second year in a row.

Korda, however, will lead the charge to both defend her 2024 title and secure her first win of the 2025 LPGA season — as well as add to her full trio of trophies collected at The ANNIKA.

Four other Top-10 players will look to upend Korda's back-to-back bid, including No. 3 Miyu Yamashita, No. 6 Charley Hull, No. 9 Mao Saigo, and No. 10 Lottie Woad.

With the 2025 CMA Group Tour Championship capping the LPGA season later this month, The ANNIKA will also see golfers on the bubble — like US stars Rose Zhang and 2023 champion Lilia Vu — try to snag enough points to make the end-of-year tournament's final 60-player cut.

How to watch The ANNIKA 2025 LPGA tournament

Coverage of the fifth edition of The ANNIKA continues through Sunday, airing live on the Golf Channel.

UCLA Takes Down Oklahoma in Top 10 2025/26 NCAA Basketball Action

Oklahoma sophomore Zya Vann guards UCLA senior Gabriela Jaquez during a 2025 NCAA basketball game.
No. 3 UCLA basketball overcame the first major test of their 2025/26 NCAA season on Monday. (Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)

The No. 3 UCLA Bruins rose to the occasion on Monday, looking like 2025/26 NCAA basketball championship contenders as they took down the No. 6 Oklahoma Sooners 73-59 in Sacramento.

Utah transfer Gianna Kneepkens made the difference for the Bruins, leading all scorers with 20 points while opposing defenses limited both UCLA center Lauren Betts and Oklahoma big Raegan Beers to single digits.

Bruins forward Angela Dugalić also put up a standout performance, coming off the bench to score 16 points and snag 15 rebounds on Monday.

"There are so many weapons that I feel like it's hard for the defense to choose what to take away," Kneepkens said ahead of Monday's matchup. "What makes this team special is that any night could be someone's night."

Monday's clash with UCLA also served as the national broadcast debut of Oklahoma freshman guard Aaliyah Chavez, with the No. 1 high school basketball recruit seeing her first Top 10 NCAA matchup as a Sooner.

Chavez had a slow start against the experienced Bruins, registering 11 points, three assists, and two rebounds across her 32 minutes on the court.

How to watch UCLA basketball this week

The heat continues for No. 3 UCLA on Thursday, when the Bruins will host the No. 11 North Carolina Tar Heels at 9 PM ET, airing live on ESPN.

WNBA Star Alyssa Thomas Signs with Overseas Offseason League Project B

Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas defends as Seattle Storm star Nneka Ogwumike drives to the basket during a 2025 WNBA game.
Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas is the second WNBA player to sign with new offseason league Project B, joining Seattle Storm star Nneka Ogwumike. (Alika Jenner/Getty Images)

Newly formed offseason league Project B is stocking up, with Phoenix Mercury star forward Alyssa Thomas becoming the second big-name WNBA player to sign with the overseas venture ahead of its anticipated November 2026 debut.

Thomas follows Seattle Storm forward Nneka Ogwumike in joining Project B, a traveling tournament-style competition reportedly offering players significant pay raises into the seven- and even eight-figure echelon — as well as equity stakes in the league.

Thomas will still feature in the 2026 season of Unrivaled 3×3 Basketball this January, with the launch of Project B expected to conflict with Unrivaled's third season in 2027.

With salaries reportedly topping both Unrivaled and the WNBA, Project B's funding sources came into question after Ogwumike's announcement last week.

In February, The Financial Times named Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund as a league investor, though Project B co-founder Grady Burnett denied those claims to Front Office Sports last week.

However, the league is working with event partner Sela, a known subsidiary of the Saudi Public Investment Fund, though Burnett was quick to qualify that "Sela is one event partner that we pay money to. We do not have any dollars coming from them."

With the first season of Project B set to field 66 players, expect more high-profile signings to continue as the new venture adds to the increasingly crowded WNBA offseason space.