Sports
WNBA mock draft: After Wings win lottery for Paige Bueckers, who goes next?
The WNBA Draft lottery is in the books, setting the order for April’s 2025 draft. Similar to the past two years, there shouldn’t be much drama at the top, considering the only way Paige Bueckers doesn’t get drafted first is if she elects to stay at UConn for an additional season. For the most part, this mock draft doesn’t include players who have another year of eligibility, but I’ve included a couple of exceptions, namely Bueckers, who said she is treating 2024-25 as her final season.
Take a look at the final results for the WNBA Draft Lottery presented by @StateFarm
The @DallasWings will have the #1 overall pick in the Draft on April 14th 🙌 pic.twitter.com/l9C6zpL167
— WNBA (@WNBA) November 17, 2024
This is the league’s first draft with 13 teams, as the Golden State Valkyries will begin play in the 2025 season. However, there are still only 12 picks in the first round because the Las Vegas Aces lost their pick for providing impermissible player benefits.
GO DEEPER
Dallas Wings score No. 1 pick in 2025 WNBA Draft Lottery
Let’s look at which players are the best fit for each WNBA team.
Paige Bueckers | 6-foot guard | UConn
This is a dream scenario for the Wings, who have tons of depth in the frontcourt with Satou Sabally, Teaira McCowan and Maddy Siegrist, but Dallas needs an organizing force in the backcourt. Bueckers has vacillated on the positional spectrum throughout her UConn career, but her playmaking has thrived regardless of where she is placed on the court. She has ranked in at least the 92nd percentile in assist percentage every season while also placing in the 98th percentile or above in assist-to-turnover ratio. Even if Bueckers isn’t a prototypical point guard (and won’t be asked to play that role with KK Arnold and Kaitlyn Chen on the Huskies’ roster this season), her selflessness means she’s constantly looking to create for others.
Bueckers is also an exceptionally efficient scorer who finishes at an elite rate at all three levels (in the paint, midrange and beyond the arc). On defense, Bueckers has shown the ability to guard one through four. She is strong in isolation but a menace as a help defender, reading the floor as well as she does on offense to pick off passes and jump-start the Huskies’ transition attack. The No. 1 recruit in her high school class has been as good as advertised, showcasing a complete set of skills in college that also figures to translate seamlessly to the pros.
I just fell to my knees. THANK YOU LORD! 😭😭😭😭
— Arike Ogunbowale (@Arike_O) November 17, 2024
Olivia Miles | 5-10 guard | Notre Dame
It’s risky to draft for need at the No. 2 pick, and Kiki Iriafen is the higher-rated prospect, but the Sparks need a guard in a bad way, especially since they already sent away their 2026 first-round pick to the Seattle Storm. There is nothing to be gained from another year of missing the playoffs. With Cameron Brink and Rickea Jackson already on the roster — as well as a still-in-her-prime Dearica Hamby — Los Angeles needs someone to lead its offense, and that’s Miles.
Although she missed her junior season with a torn ACL (and can technically return to Notre Dame for one more year), Miles has looked spry through the Irish’s first four games, gliding up and down the court and showing off her trademark passing vision. Miles is always looking to generate offense in transition, and she creates windows in the half court with her accurate ball delivery. She keeps defenses honest with her drives to the hoop and seems to have used the year off to refine her shooting stroke, as she’s making 47 percent of her 3s and 83 percent of her free throws. The Irish have generally relied on perimeter talent during Miles’ tenure, but she should have minimal difficulty transitioning into a post-heavy offense with her IQ.
Miles is also a strong defender with good size for her position. It’s easy to imagine her covering ones in isolation but also switching on the perimeter alongside Rae Burrell and Jackson.
Kiki Iriafen | 6-3 forward/center | USC
This isn’t an ideal fit for the Sky, who already have Kamilla Cardoso and Angel Reese. However, the franchise is only one year out of the playoffs and can afford to be patient in the rebuild, even if that means overloading in the frontcourt to get another talented player.
Iriafen came on a little late in her college career because of the glut of bigs ahead of her at Stanford, but she excelled when given a regular role. She’s a high-usage, high-efficiency scorer, and she improves when the lights are brighter. Iriafen’s athleticism pops on the floor, whether it’s her first step when facing up, her elevation at the rim or her competitiveness on the glass. Ideally, she’d harness that athleticism more on defense, where she hasn’t been an elite playmaker — the Cardinal’s defense wasn’t noticeably different with her on or off the court. However, her physical tools suggest she can be impactful on this end, and USC will be reliant on that.
Stanford’s history of producing high-level frontcourt players also works in Iriafen’s favor. Before the 2024 draft, WNBA general managers compared her game to Nneka Ogwumike’s. The 2012 No. 1 pick’s college career was far more decorated than that of Iriafen, but they have similar builds and play styles, providing an ideal ceiling for Iriafen in the W.
Dominique Malonga | 6-6 center | Lyon (France)
The Mystics are yet to hire a GM or coach, so the decision-making falls to Michael Winger, the president of Monumental Basketball for the Mystics and the NBA’s Wizards. What we know about Winger from his NBA experience is that he believes in building patiently through the draft. From his two drafts with the men’s team, it’s clear he loves young French prospects, as the Wizards drafted 18-year-old Bilal Coulibaly in 2023 and 19-year-old Alex Sarr in 2024. That makes this the perfect franchise to swing big on Malonga, who will turn 20 before the draft.
Malonga is a special athlete, vertically and laterally, as the first Frenchwoman to dunk in a game. She averaged 11.9 points and 8.9 rebounds in the French league in 2023-24 despite being several years younger than most of her competition, and she improved those numbers to 19.3 points and 13.3 rebounds during the playoffs. She also came off the bench for France during the Olympics as the home team won a silver medal. Her ability to create with the ball in her hands is also unique for a frontcourt prospect.
Dominique Malonga au dunk, c’est trop 🤯#PassionnémentBleu pic.twitter.com/VmVA90et06
— Équipes de France de Basket (@FRABasketball) October 30, 2024
The Mystics already have Shakira Austin as a young center, but injuries have limited her to 31 games through the past two seasons. Malonga’s age and the uncertainty over Austin’s health make taking a shot on the young French star worth it.
5. Golden State Valkyries
Georgia Amoore | 5-6 guard | Kentucky
It is challenging to pick a player for a team with an empty roster, so expect this spot to change significantly until the draft. For now, let’s start with a point guard who knows how to run a pro-style offense: Amoore. Amoore has been confidently operating out of the pick-and-roll for three years, leading one of the country’s best offenses at Virginia Tech. She’s a superb ballhandler and decision-maker, even if her flair sometimes gets her into trouble.
Like another point guard who plays for a Golden State team, Amoore also loves to shoot from long distance, creating massive space despite her small frame thanks to her side-step takeoff. Her percentage has cratered on self-created 3s, though those shots are often forced upon her when the offense can’t generate a better look; however, she shot 43 percent on spot-up 3s over the past two seasons and has great shooting form provided she can limit her volume.
Amoore has been learning from fellow small guard Kelsey Plum for the past two seasons and would benefit from playing for Natalie Nakase, Plum’s former assistant who happens to be another short guard. Amoore is personable and marketable, and she makes a ton of sense as a building block for a new franchise.
6. Washington Mystics (from Atlanta Dream via Dallas)
Sonia Citron | 6-1 wing | Notre Dame
Ideally, Citron would land on a team better positioned to compete immediately — and perhaps someone will trade up for her — but she’s simply too talented and productive to fall below this spot. Citron is a career 37 percent 3-point shooter and 83.4 percent free-throw shooter who can also drive and finish through contact. She rebounds well for a perimeter player and is also a terrific defender from one to three. She’s overtaxed creating with the ball in her hand but is an outstanding secondary option. In a league thin on wings, Citron will have a role to play for years.
The Indiana Fever would be a perfect landing spot for Citron if they are willing to fork over some assets to Washington. As it stands, the Mystics would be fortunate to have her as part of their rebuild.
Maddy Westbeld | 6-3 forward | Notre Dame
The Liberty thrived with a wing-heavy, physical identity last season, particularly during the postseason and especially when they went with three bigs in the decisive Game 5 of the WNBA Finals. Even if Maddy Westbeld seems positionally redundant, New York will find a way to get her on the court given her toughness, ability to defend multiple positions and 3-point shooting. It’s easy to imagine Westbeld eventually taking over for Kayla Thornton as an interior defender — nobody gave Elizabeth Kitley more difficulty than Westbeld during the All-American’s 2023-24 season. Although Westbeld doesn’t have noteworthy athleticism, her production has never suffered for it.
Westbeld is also an intuitive offensive player who moves off the ball well, a necessity in New York’s system. If worse comes to worst and Westbeld’s injury issues to start the season linger, New York has proved it’s among the best places to rehab in the WNBA.
8. Indiana Fever
Te-Hina Paopao | 5-9 guard | South Carolina
The Fever need to improve their defense and perhaps find a combo forward who can improve on what NaLyssa Smith brought last season. However, that type of player isn’t available at this point in the draft, so why not double down on what Indiana does well? The Fever already have offensive firepower with the backcourt of Caitlin Clark and Kelsey Mitchell, and bringing in Paopao as a sub for either keeps the level high. Paopao is one of college basketball’s most outstanding shooters in recent memory; she made 46.8 percent of her attempts last season, leading the nation. She also runs a mean pick-and-roll, reads the floor well, has a developing floater and generally executes everything you would want from a lead guard or two-guard offensively.
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To keep South Carolina on top, Dawn Staley had to change
Defensively, being at South Carolina has worked wonders for Paopao. She has improved at staying in front at the point of attack, and she positions herself well in help defense. Paopao isn’t the type of player who will single-handedly raise Indiana’s defensive floor, but she can earn minutes by avoiding mistakes.
But this pick isn’t about the defense. Just imagine trying to defend a Clark/Aliyah Boston pick-and-roll with Mitchell and Paopao surrounding them. It seems physically impossible.
9. Seattle Storm
Shyanne Sellers | 6-2 guard/wing | Maryland
The Storm need some young talent with upside. They have Jordan Horston but no one else who is realistically on the front end of their development curve now that Nika Mühl is out for the season with a torn ACL. This feels like an opportune moment to bring in Sellers, a player with great athleticism and a high IQ. Sellers is a dynamic downhill attacker who has a good-looking jump shot. She has incredible pace in the open court and is the foundation for Maryland’s transition attack. Her point guard reps in college have been useful, but at 6-2, she can play multiple positions, giving her additional utility in the pros. The sky is the limit with Sellers.
Saniya Rivers | 6-1 guard/wing | NC State
The early returns from Rivers’ senior season have indicated she is best with the ball in her hands as the lead guard, which makes Chicago a useful landing spot, since Lindsay Allen is a capable caretaker point guard, but not the option for the future. Joining Tyler Marsh is also a boon for Rivers. She is hyper-athletic and gets into the paint with ease, and being disruptive doesn’t begin to describe the defensive havoc she can wreak. But her jumper and decision-making need some work. Rivers’ physical tools bring to mind a younger Jackie Young. Marsh helped turn the Aces star into an efficient offensive player, and that will be the task with Rivers.
Charlisse Leger-Walker | 5-10 guard | UCLA
The Lynx got quality play out of their lead guard spot from Courtney Williams, but they could still use a true point guard to set up their scorers. Leger-Walker is a wonderful passer in the half court — her skip passes out of the pick-and-roll demand multiple rewatches. She’s been inconsistent as a shooter, but perhaps sitting out for a year with a torn ACL will force her to develop her jumper. Leger-Walker hasn’t brought much to the floor as a defender, but Minnesota drafted Alissa Pili last year, so that doesn’t seem to be a prerequisite.
12. Phoenix Mercury (swap with New York)
Aneesah Morrow | 6-1 forward | LSU
Phoenix played most of last season without a true power forward, which creates an opening for Morrow. She puts pressure on the basket, rebounds the ball better than almost anyone at her position, consistently makes plays on defense and gets buckets no matter who else is on the court. Those attributes would benefit the Mercury. The one issue for Morrow in Nate Tibbetts’ system is that she doesn’t take or make 3s, but she does so many other things well that it would be hard to pass on her at the end of the first round.
Also in consideration: South Carolina’s Raven Johnson, Kansas State’s Ayoka Lee and Ole Miss’ Madison Scott.
(Top photo: Aaron J. Thornton / Getty Images)
Sports
Tennessee has teetered on irrelevancy. Can an outsider return the Lady Vols to the summit?
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — In October, before Kim Caldwell had coached a game for Tennessee, she sat on an orange couch in her office and tried to get comfortable.
This was both a physical and philosophical challenge for the first-year Lady Volunteers coach at the time. At five months pregnant with her first child, there were certain realities about what “comfortable” might look like moving forward for her, and she missed the caffeine that she had given up months earlier (especially at this point in the year when team prep could seem never-ending).
But there was a deeper question: How does Caldwell — who had coached just 33 Division I basketball games — get comfortable in a position once held by one of the most important people in women’s basketball? And not just that, but how does she proceed when the program had fallen from its previous heights to a middling territory, which in Lady Vols-speak, is as bad as irrelevance? As someone who had coached against just three power conference opponents, how would she come up with the answers to get this program back to the standard that Pat Summitt set?
Caldwell, 36, grew up when Tennessee and UConn ruled women’s college basketball. Summitt and Geno Auriemma — their intensity and their rivalry — broke through the noise to make those epic matchups part of the mainstream sporting culture.
“It made people talk about women’s sports. It made people talk about women’s basketball,” Caldwell said. “It was such an incredible time.”
At her AAU practices in West Virginia, Caldwell’s teams were split up not by Team A versus Team B but by the Lady Vols versus the Huskies. At a tournament as a high school player, she looked into the stands and saw Summitt and Auriemma sitting next to one another evaluating recruits and later, walking past Summitt in the hallway.
She never thought — even as recently as a year ago — that she would be coaching against Auriemma in that rivalry game, or throwing on an orange pullover and walking into tournaments to recruit just like Summitt. Last summer, as she prepared for one such tournament in Chicago, she had to give herself a pep talk before walking into the gym — “Here we go. You’ve got bright orange on. Hold your head up high. Get in there,” she told herself — as she wondered if any players would react to her the way she once had to Summit.
Along with UConn and Stanford, Tennessee is tied to a singular coach like almost no other program in women’s college basketball — or college sports. So even on the days when she doesn’t drive past the nine-foot statue of Summitt outside Thompson-Boling Arena on her way to Tennessee staff offices, she still walks by a glass display of the eight national championship trophies that Summitt won. “The Summitt” is painted in script on the floor where Caldwell now coaches her home games. And then there’s the Tennessee orange. A color that Summitt made iconic.
“I will never be Pat Summitt. Nobody can, but I will strive every day to be someone she would be proud of.”
New Lady Vols head coach Kim Caldwell on the legacy of the program she is about to lead. pic.twitter.com/yMZCs4M2xe
— Karthik Venkataraman (@KarthikV_) April 9, 2024
In her book, Summitt wrote, “I remember every player — every single one — who wore the Tennessee orange, a shade that our rivals hate, a bold, aggravating color. … But to us, the color is a flag of pride, because it identifies us as Lady Vols and therefore as women of an unmistakable type. Fighters.”
Since Summitt retired in 2012, Tennessee has been fighting. First, to remain at the top, where Summitt had led the program. And then, to retain relevance. Both endeavors were mostly failures, though the program retained some prestige simply because of its history.
Now Caldwell, who had one season of coaching Division I basketball under her belt when she took the job in April, holds the reins to one of the sport’s most important programs.
“There’s an enormous weight that comes with it, and I knew that going into it. You talk about the history, what Pat Summitt did for sports in general, what she did for the state of Tennessee, what she did for basketball,” Caldwell said. “Where basketball is now. … I don’t know that we would be here without her.”
But over the last few seasons, as women’s basketball has grown more and more popular, Tennessee has been strangely missing from the fold. As the game moves forward, Tennessee hopes that its most recent (unexpected) hire means the Lady Vols don’t miss the next chapter, too.
The surprise around the women’s basketball world was palpable last April when Tennessee fired Kellie Harper. Many assumed she would get at least another season to try and turn around the program.
But any surprise around Harper’s firing paled when compared to the reaction when Tennessee announced its new head coach less than a week later: a swift “who?”
Caldwell had just finished her first season at Marshall. Though she had led the mid-major to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1997 (and just the second time in program history), it lost to four-seed Virginia Tech by 43. Before Marshall, Caldwell had spent seven seasons as the head coach at her alma mater, Division II Glenville State University in West Virginia.
The minimal Division I and power conference experience was obvious, but it was just as glaring that she had no ties to Summitt or even the state of Tennessee. The program stayed within the Summitt tree after she retired, hiring Tennessee native Holly Warlick, a longtime assistant and former player under Summitt, and then, in 2019, turned to Harper, a Tennessee native, Summitt protégé and beloved alum. Neither returned the program to its elite perch, failing to reach the Final Four for more than a decade.
Recruits had never witnessed Tennessee achieve the way the program historically had, though their parents remembered. Getting this hire right was important; every passing day seemingly moved the program further from contention.
Given that Harper was fired with four years left on her contract and she had received an extension from Tennessee athletic director Danny White just a year earlier, most in the industry assumed such a drastic move indicated that White planned to swing for the fences. Harper earned $1.1 million a year — making her the 12th highest-paid coach in women’s college hoops — so if the Lady Vols upped that salary even a bit, they could likely lure a high-profile coach to Knoxville. Tennessee alum and Duke coach Kara Lawson and Las Vegas Aces coach Becky Hammon, who had just won two WNBA titles, were considered people White should pursue. USC coach Lindsay Gottlieb was among the prominent names on media coaching lists. A report connected Tennessee’s search firm to Indiana coach Teri Moren.
The names being floated were esteemed within women’s basketball. Lawson, the only UT alum currently coaching at a high level, was the only Summitt connection in the group.
From Knoxville, White felt a pull away from his predecessors, who had hired from the Summitt tree.
“We had already gone through those chapters twice,” he said. “If there was any pressure at all, it was probably more so to go outside (the tree) and try something different. I don’t know if that was real or something I invented myself, but I certainly didn’t feel pressure to stay inside of coach Summitt’s tree.”
In administrative circles, White’s choice was unexpected, but his methods weren’t surprising.
As the Buffalo AD, he hired men’s basketball coach Nate Oats, who had only two years of college experience as an assistant and had only been a head coach of a high school boy’s basketball team. (Alabama hired Oats five seasons later.) White also hired Lance Leipold as Buffalo’s football coach despite Leipold’s previous seven seasons off everyone’s radar at a Division III school. (Kansas hired him five years later.) At UCF in 2018, White hired Josh Heupel. Many assumed Heupel’s career had dead-ended three years earlier and were surprised he was landing a big job. After three bowl game appearances with UCF, White brought Heupel to Tennessee, which is in the College Football Playoff this season as the No. 7 seed.
“He’s kind of got a Midas touch,” Leipold told The Athletic in 2022.
Hiring for the Tennessee women’s job is its own beast. His conversations with Caldwell reminded him of talking to Heupel. He liked that her system was different and exciting, utilizing a full-court pressing defense that forced turnovers, an offense that took early 3s and hockey-style substitutions that kept players’ legs fresh throughout the games. Her sample size at Marshall was small, but the program had gone from .500 in conference play to winning the league title in her first year.
“I think more frequently in different sports, at the highest level, people are seeing,” White said, “that coaching is coaching.”
The decision made one thing clear: Hiring Caldwell could make White look prescient — and more importantly, the move could return Tennessee to the top of women’s basketball — if it works out. If it doesn’t, it likely will be considered an obvious and avoidable misstep in caretaking the program.
For the first time in a long time, more eyes and scrutiny are on Tennessee. Not because of high expectations, but because everyone wants to know: Is Caldwell the answer to the post-Summitt conundrum?
When Caldwell’s agent, Brian Stanchak, called her on April 1 to tell her Tennessee’s search firm was gauging her interest, Caldwell wondered if it was an April Fool’s Day joke.
“Honestly. I was thinking, ‘Anyone but me. There’s got to be people that have more experience under their belt or an assistant,’” Caldwell said. “I mean, it’s been one year (in Division I).”
Caldwell took a call with Tennessee mostly for the experience of interviewing for a prominent position. She was genuinely happy at Marshall. She and her husband, Justin, had just bought their dream house — a four-bedroom custom home on a spacious lot with an apartment above the garage for her mom.
Other mid-major and power conference jobs had come up during her head coaching career, and her response was always the same: “I love winning and I love my players. I don’t love everything else that comes with coaching, right?” she said. “The lower level you are, the more basketball you usually get to do. That’s as honest, as transparent as I can be about it.”
But the Tennessee job was different.
With a tornado warning in West Virginia hitting right before her scheduled interview slot, she huddled in a closet, rather than postponing because of the inclement weather. She sweated through the interview, not because she was nervous but because the closet was so stuffy. When it ended, she thanked Tennessee for the conversation and assumed that would be the end of it.
But when White wanted her to visit Knoxville, it began to sink in that she actually had a shot.
“Do I stay here because I love it and I’m happy, or do I take the best job that I’m ever going to get offered right now?” Caldwell said. “Because I can work for 80 more years, and I will never get offered a job of this magnitude again.”
Caldwell was surprised at how comfortable she felt in Knoxville, and leaned toward a yes if an offer came.
But there were still detractors. Her mom asked why she would leave a state where she was beloved to coach somewhere she wouldn’t be. ”They’re gonna be like: Who is this? Why is she now our coach?” Caldwell said her mom cautioned.
She told her mom the same thing she had told her players: Don’t leave any regrets on the floor.
Danny White when he hired coach Kim Caldwell: “For fans, if you like what you’re seeing inside of Neyland Stadium in terms of the amount of points we score, I think you are going to like what you see on the basketball floor.” https://t.co/Wmq8BFmfiy
— Josh Ward (@Josh_Ward) December 14, 2024
So when White called, she accepted. But she also knew the pressures that would come at Tennessee. An antsy fan base, a motivated athletic department, the women’s basketball world wondering how she could solve a puzzle that had proven impossible for other Division II and mid-major coaches.
“I think you just have to bet on yourself and say, ‘Hey, you’re gonna be uncomfortable for a while, but I was just uncomfortable for six months. Yes, I can be uncomfortable again,’” Caldwell said. “You bet on your own success.”
Every season, Caldwell keeps a notebook on her team, what’s going right and wrong, and, most importantly, how she’s feeling. Even during a season when the pressure is so different and the stage is so much bigger, she finds consistent trends in what she writes and feels from year to year.
“I’m miserable,” she said with a laugh in mid-December. “So I’m right on track.”
This is how it goes for Caldwell’s system: In November and most of December, she’s miserable. She never wants to talk basketball at Thanksgiving. By Christmas? She might be ready to talk hoops as things usually start coming together.
With the Lady Vols sitting at 8-0, a few of the early questions have been answered. Tennessee picked up significant wins over Florida State and Iowa earlier this month, but Caldwell knows SEC play will be different.
Home attendance is the highest in Knoxville since the 2015-16 season, and recruiting took off immediately with Caldwell. She’s already picked up two top-25 players in the 2025 class, matching a pace close to Summitt’s in her final five years. By comparison, Warlick signed 10 in seven seasons, and Harper signed just one in her five classes from 2020-24.
“I was pretty shocked at first. And then I kind of told myself, ‘Why not?’ It’s not like the program was a national powerhouse,” said ESPN analyst Andraya Carter, a member of Summitt’s final recruiting class at Tennessee. “I had a lot of reservations, but I started seeing some of the (recruits) she was getting. I just was like, ‘Let’s go.’ The system that she’s running is literally one where you can’t hesitate, so for me, as an alum, not an analyst, I’m not going to hesitate either. … Let’s see what she’s got.”
Caldwell’s Lady Vols lead the nation with 98 points per game and turn over opponents a nationally best 30 times a game. Last season, Marshall finished in the top five nationally in both categories — so that part feels pretty familiar.
just getting started. pic.twitter.com/7cJKbcFgjb
— Lady Vols Basketball (@LadyVol_Hoops) December 14, 2024
But Caldwell’s still getting used to some differences. At Marshall, she had three assistants, one graduate assistant and two managers. At Tennessee, she has a staff of 13 and nine managers. She never had a video coordinator before coming to Knoxville; now practice and game footage are ready and clipped for her nearly by the time practice is over. She said she learned more during her first three weeks in Knoxville than an entire season at Marshall.
With SEC play around the corner, the toughest tests are still ahead of the Lady Vols, but with each win, the argument grows that White made the right move and Caldwell could be the unexpected answer at Tennessee. Will that be enough to bring the program back to its previous heights? Caldwell’s confident enough to bet on herself and her team.
“You don’t turn it down,” Caldwell said. “And then you spend every day trying to make sure that they realize they didn’t make a mistake.”
(Illustration: Meech Robinson / The Athletic; Photos: Bryan Lynn / Icon Sportswire, Damian Strohmeyer / Sports Illustrated via Getty Images, Donald Page / Getty Images)
Sports
Brittany Mahomes silences Taylor Swift feud speculation after attending Eras Tour-themed party: 'My people'
Brittany Mahomes and Taylor Swift have notably not spent time together at as many Kansas City Chiefs games this season as last year.
The two are significant others of the top stars on the team in Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce, respectively.
The apparent separation came as the two appeared to support different candidates in this year’s presidential election. Mahomes liked a post from Donald Trump on Instagram and wrote several messages regarding her critics, while Swift openly endorsed Kamala Harris.
But the two appear to be all good.
According to multiple outlets, Patrick and Brittany recently attended an Eras Tour-themed party hosted by Swift, and the quarterback rocked a tuxedo similar to the one Kelce wore while on stage at a show. Patrick’s wife wore a sparkly silver dress.
Brittany posted several photos of the event, some of which included Swift, captioning the post, “My people” with a heart emoji.
Patrick, Brittany, Kelce and Swift attended the men’s U.S. Open final after the Chiefs’ first game of the season.
ESPN STAR FIRES BACK AT AARON RODGERS AFTER JETS QB CALLS ON CRITICS TO SHARE ‘VAX STATUS’
And Swift stood or sat alongside Brittany in the same suite for nearly every Chiefs game last year. However, this year, Swift was only seen with Mahomes twice at games — Oct. 7 against the Saints and Nov. 4 against the Buccaneers.
The duo made headlines at the Chiefs’ first game against the Ravens when they sat in separate suites to open the season. The two sat separately after Brittany incited backlash for publicly liking a post by Trump on Instagram. Swift fan groups on social media were partially responsible for circulating screenshots of Brittany’s like of Trump’s post.
Trump even weighed in on the controversy after Swift endorsed Kamala Harris for president Sept. 10. In an interview on “Fox & Friends” the next day, Trump said he liked Brittany “much better” than Swift.
Fox News’ Jackson Thompson contributed to this report.
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Sports
It cost $1.7 million to have the LAPD work — and wear Dodgers caps — at World Series parade
The response was much like that of a father when handed the bill for his daughter’s wedding reception. Joy trumps outrage every time.
So, when the city of Los Angeles informed the Dodgers that its police and fire department services for the Nov. 1 parade to celebrate the World Series championship totaled $2,028,805.19, the team was only too happy to cut the check.
The parade began at City Hall, meandered to the Walt Disney Concert Hall and ended at Fifth and Flower streets, wheeling through downtown on open-top double-decker buses with an estimated 250,000 fans lining the streets. Then came a boisterous rally in front of 42,000 fans at Dodger Stadium.
It was the parade the Dodgers couldn’t stage after winning the 2020 World Series during the COVID-19 shutdown. It was their first parade, in fact, since winning the World Series in 1988.
“I’m telling you, the game is about the players and the fans,” manager Dave Roberts told The Times. “And in 2020 we just didn’t have that opportunity. … The city needed this parade.”
State law requires applicants — in this case, the Dodgers — requesting a permit to conduct a “special event” to pay “the city’s actual cost of providing the required number of police and other city employees necessary to ensure the safety of both the participants and the community.”
Therefore, it was the Dodgers — and not taxpayers — who will pay the Los Angeles Police Department $1,738,621.19 and the L.A. Fire Department $290,184 for making sure the celebration was conducted in a safe, orderly manner.
Good thing, given the dire financial straits the city of L.A. finds itself in. City departments went at least $215 million over budget from the beginning of the fiscal year July 1 through Oct. 31, according to an analysis. Expensive legal settlements and court judgments resulting from lawsuits against the city have been especially costly.
“We have been working closely with the city for some time and will be finalizing the total reimbursement soon,” the Dodgers said in a statement to The Times. “It was a great event for the city, Dodger fans and our team, and we’re grateful for the joint support of the Dodgers provided by the city as a whole, especially the Mayor, the City Council, the LAPD, the LAFD and the [Department of Transportation].”
According to a city expenditure report, nearly all the money spent by the LAPD on the parade went to pay officers by the hour, from a communications intern to numerous officers to a deputy chief, although $415,464 was charged for “fringe benefits” listed under “indirect costs.” Maybe the blue Dodgers caps several of the officers wore fell into that category.
The LAPD bill broke down the total number of man and woman hours: 8,823.
A few days earlier when the Dodgers defeated the New York Yankees in Game 5 to take the World Series title, unruly fans set fire to an L.A. Metro bus and commandeered street intersections for burnouts and street racing. More than 70 people were arrested for vandalism, assault on a police officer and failure to disperse.
No such behavior marred the parade. The only arrest reported was of a man who threw a bottle at officers. A group of rowdy fans hanging around afterward were ushered from the parade route by officers in tactical gear marching in formation. Otherwise, it was a cheerful outpouring of appreciation for the Dodgers.
All to be paid for by the Dodgers.
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