Indiana
Indiana Fever exploring trade possibilities for DeWanna Bonner: Source
The Indiana Fever have looked at trade possibilities for DeWanna Bonner, a league source told The Athletic on Tuesday.
Bonner has no interest in returning to the Fever, according to Front Office Sports, with the Atlanta Dream and Phoenix Mercury as her preferred destinations.
Bonner, a six-time All-Star, signed with Indiana this past offseason after playing the previous five years with the Connecticut Sun. In doing so, she reunited with coach Stephanie White, who coached her during her final two seasons with the Sun, and joined a franchise looking to contend this season.
But Bonner’s role with the Fever has been inconsistent. She started Indiana’s first three games, but was subsequently moved to the bench ahead of Indiana’s matchup with the New York Liberty on May 24. She has not played since June 10 for what the team called “personal reasons.” Bonner is not with the team amid its three-game road trip.
“She’s doing well, she’s doing well,” White said on Saturday. “Again, no timeline. I think it’s day-to-day, and for us to make sure that we’re continuing to be supportive of DB in her time away.”
Bonner has yet to play more than 27 minutes in a game this season, and she has taken four shots or fewer in five of her nine appearances. Bonner’s minutes average (21.3) is also the lowest since Bonner’s rookie season in 2009, when she was still coming off the Phoenix Mercury bench.
As The Athletic previously reported, the Mercury heavily courted Bonner this past offseason, and Bonner’s desire to potentially win immediately, among other factors, led her to the Indiana Fever. The Minnesota Lynx also looked at signing Bonner, and explored trading for Bonner’s fiancée Alyssa Thomas.
Thomas was later traded to the Mercury, where she is averaging 14.4 points, 8.9 assists and 7.2 rebounds per game.
The Fever (6-7) are 2-2 in their last four games and are set to play the Seattle Storm on Tuesday night.
While it’s possible that the Fever could trade Bonner, Bonner’s contract is unprotected, meaning the franchise could waive her and only have to pay her prorated salary. If Indiana were to waive Bonner, franchises around the league would have the opportunity to claim her off of waivers before she would hit unrestricted free agency. Only Washington and Connecticut have the cap space to absorb Bonner’s current contract, per the Her Hoop Stats salary database. If Bonner clears waivers, she could sign with a new team as a free agent; New York is the lone other team with cap space and an empty roster spot. Phoenix has the cap space to add Bonner, but would need to clear a roster spot.
If the Fever were to release Bonner, it’s possible that the team could then bring back guard Aari McDonald, who played a key role off Indiana’s bench earlier this season while both Sophie Cunningham and Caitlin Clark were out with injury. McDonald averaged 11 points and 3.0 assists in her three appearances with Indiana. McDonald was waived on June 13 after Clark and Cunningham returned to play, and as a result of 10 days now passing since her release, the Fever can re-sign her if they choose.
(Photo: Geoff Stellfox / Getty Images)
Indiana
Where to watch Indiana Fever vs Washington Mystics on June 8: TV channel, start time and streaming
The WNBA has returned with a brand new collective bargaining agreement and a league full of loaded rosters as the 2026 season tips off.
A rookie class headlined by Dallas Wings top pick Azzi Fudd, Minnesota’s Olivia Miles and Washington’s Lauren Betts is ready to make a mark in the pros while the defending champion Las Vegas Aces look to keep their dynasty alive with a fourth title in five years.
As the the season gets going under a new media rights deal, it can be tough to figure out which channel each team is playing on every night. Here’s everything you need to know to tune in when the Washington Mystics host the Indiana Fever on Monday.
What time is Indiana Fever vs Washington Mystics?
Tip off between the Washington Mystics and Indiana Fever is scheduled for 7 p.m. (ET) on Monday, June 8.
How to watch Indiana Fever vs Washington Mystics on Monday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Monday, June 8, 2026, at 6:11 a.m.
Watch the WNBA all season on Fubo
WNBA scores and results
See scores, results for all of today’s games .
See WNBA scores, results from June 7
Odds for WNBA games today
The latest WNBA odds can be found below from the best sports betting apps . Some odds may include games scheduled on future dates.
Indiana
3-star Cooper Zachary features as Fishers (Ind.) finish undefeated at Indiana camp
Indiana
Food Delivery Robots To Launch On Indiana University Campus
One of the robots that will begin delivering orders on the Indiana University Bloomington campus took a practice run on Thursday, June 4, 2026. There are 24 automated delivery vehicles that will be delivering food. Photo from USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect.
By Andrew Miller, Special to The Herald-Times
The Herald-Times, USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect
INDIANAPOLIS — A sleek white robot sits with a scrolling “GO HOOSIERS!” message on its pixelated front screen. It cycles through other faces too: darting eyes, blinks and hearts.
Orders placed using the Grubhub app may be delivered on the Indiana University by robots beginning June 8, 2026. Photo from USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect.
“These robots are very, very polite,” Rahul Shrivastav, executive director of IU Dining and Hospitality, said Thursday, June 4, during a test run.
It’s one of a fleet of 24 food-delivery robots launching June 8 on Indiana University Bloomington campus, in partnership with Grubhub and Avride. Shrivastav said they’re part of an effort to make campus food more accessible and convenient.
The robots have been tested for 18 months, mapping and learning paths. They’ll be confined to campus, with boundaries of East Third Street and Ind. 46. On the west, their coverage will extend up Indiana Avenue to 13th Street, North Walnut Grove to 17th Street and continue north on North Fee Lane.
Shrivastav said they’ll help students busy with classes and those with accessibility needs. Ordering via robot will be available on the Grubhub app. The robots will be doing deliveries from 8 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. daily. Shrivastav said store hours vary by location on the weekend so he advices customers to look at the store hours on the GrubHub app.
Participating locations this summer include:
- King’s Hawaiian, BlenzBowls, The Meltdown and Hubbard & Cravens at Bookmarket at Herman B Wells Library
- The Vault Pub, Sugar and Spice Bakery, The Globe, The Lantern, Union Market and Whitfield Grill at the Indiana Memorial Union.
- Eskenazi Café at the Eskenazi Museum of Art
Drew Smith, director of retail dining at IU, said the robots can hold about eight entrees with four drinks. Its trunk is well-insulated, he said, keeping hot orders hot and cold ones cold.
The delivery fee is $3.50 per order. That fee isn’t covered by student meal plans, but the food ordered can be. And Smith said the robots don’t need tips.
One of the robots that will begin delivering orders on the Indiana University Bloomington campus took a practice run on Thursday, June 4, 2026. There are 24 automated delivery vehicles that will be delivering food. A robot with a food delivery waits for a customer to pick up their order at the Indiana University Sample Gates on Thursday, June 4, 2026, during a practice run. Photo from USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect.
“Now, some people still throw flowers in there, and stuff,” Smith said. “I’ve seen it at other universities doing that.”
Other state universities have already introduced similar services. Purdue University adopted them in 2019, and Ball State University launched its own fleet in 2022. Shrivastav said IU waited to make sure it had the “right robot” and had time to prepare.
The robots have often made the news because of vandalism and targeted assaults. But Shrivastav said he’s not concerned about that being a problem at IU. He said students have ended up “adopting these robots and naming them” at other campuses. Still, they’ll have an added layer of security, with footage reviewable by police.
“They also have cameras everywhere,” he said. “So any vandalism, anything like that, is always recorded.”
Customers use the GrubHub app to unlock the robot when it reaches its destination. Students, parents and visitors can order food using the robot, to be delivered on the IU campus.
This article originally appeared on The Herald-Times: Food delivery robots to launch on Indiana University campus
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