Archive for the ‘jackson’ Category

Spartak Back in Final Four Championship

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Spartak Moscow Region will play for its third straight Euroleague Championship on Sunday after defeating Russian rival UMMC Ekaterinburg in this morning’s semifinal matchup, 83-74. Diana Taurasi scored a game-high 33 points, but Spartak would not have won without timely scoring from Sue Bird. The Storm’s point guard finished with 17 points on 7-of-9 shooting, handing out four assists.

Spartak led by most of the way and threatened to blow things open in the third quarter, but behind a big effort from Agnieszka Bibrzycka (23 points on 8-of-16 shooting), Ekaterinburg managed to keep things close through the fourth quarter. They trailed by just one with seven minutes to play when Bird’s three-pointer kicked off a 12-2 run that effectively ended the game.

Taurasi was impossible to stop much of the game, hitting difficult shots and getting to the rim off the dribble. On the other side, the dribble penetration of Ekaterinburg guards Deanna Nolan and Cappie Pondexter challenged Spartak’s defense, but UMMC was hurt by the lack of a true point guard, settling too often for contested shots from the perimeter. Nolan and Pondexter both shot 3-for-11 from the field.

Spartak got scoring from just five players, but with four of them in double-figures (including 11 for Lauren Jackson, who knocked down a trio of three-pointers) that was enough.

The win was an important statement for Spartak, which lost to Ekaterinburg in the finals of the Russian Cup and lost to them in the Russian Superleague regular season, giving Ekaterinburg the top seed in the playoffs.

Spartak’s opponent in the final will be determined by today’s second semifinal, pitting Final Four host Halcon Avenida (Spain) against MKB Euroleasing Sopron (Hungary). The winner will face Spartak Sunday in the wee hours of the morning Seattle time.

The Euroleague Final Four is not the only overseas playoff competition involving Storm players. Yesterday was also the first game of the two-game aggregate EuroCup Finals pitting Suzy Batkovic’s Cras Baket Taranato squad against Turkish side Galatasaray. On the road, Galatasaray actually led 46-38 midway through the third quarter. From there on out, Taranto outscored Galatasaray 29-9 to win going away, 67-55.

Batkovic led Taranto with 15 points and nine rebounds, shooting 5-of-10 from the field and adding three blocks. Batkovic also helped her team stifle San Antonio All-Star Sophia Young, who was limited to nine points and six turnovers in 38 minutes.

The deciding second game of the aggregate series will be played next Thursday in Turkey. If Taranto wins or loses by fewer than 12 points, it will reign as EuroCup champions.

In Turkey, a hard-fought 78-69 loss to Fenerbahce eliminated Ted Kayseri Koleji from the TBBL Playoffs. While it did not translate into a win, Ashley Robinson continued to play aggressive basketball, scoring 19 points and grabbing six rebounds.

Spartak Headed Back to Final Four

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Spartak Moscow Region will look to win its third consecutive Euroleague championship in the Euroleague Final Four after defeating Ros Casares Valencia 79-70 in Wednesday’s deciding Game 3. Ros Casares tested Spartak severely, forcing the series to the distance and trailing by just four with 1:42 to play. Spartak was able to make its free throws down the stretch and hold on for the win in a game that was taut back and forth throughout the second half.

“We had a difficult group and playoff games,” said Ros Casares coach Isma Canto. “Today we started well, but Dee (Taurasi) and Sue (Bird) started playing their game and our defense could not deal with them.”

Taurasi (22 points on 7-of-13 shooting) and Sylvia Folwes (23 points, 9-of-14 from the field) did the bulk of the scoring for Spartak. Bird provided contributions in every area, scoring 15 points (knocking down a pair of three-pointers as Spartak finally found the range from downtown), handing out a game-high assists, grabbing six rebounds and adding three steals for good measure.

Again, Lauren Jackson and DeLisha Milton-Jones neutralized each other. Jackson needed 14 shot attempts to score 12 points, and Milton-Jones shot 3-of-11 from the field, supplementing her 18-point line with 11 free throws. Spartak keyed defensively on Amaya Valdemoro and was able to hold the Spanish star in check, as Valdemoro was limited to 14 points and missed five of her six attempts from beyond the arc.

The Euroleague Final Four will be contested April 3 and April 5, with one of the finalists hosting. Spartak will square off in one semifinal against fellow Russian side UMMC Ekaterinburg, with Perfumerias Avenida (Spain) and MKB Euroleasing Sopron (Hungary) playing for the other spot in the championship game.

Spartak Takes Postseason Opener

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

The Euroleague playoffs kicked off today with all Storm eyes on the matchup between Spartak Moscow Region and ZVVZ USK Praha, featuring Sue Bird and Lauren Jackson squaring off with teammate Swin Cash.

Spartak, the two-time defending Euroleague champs, is heavily favored but USK Praha was able to keep things close on the road in Game 1. The margin was nine at halftime and eight late in the third quarter before Spartak pulled away to win 102-86.

Spartak got a combined 75 points from its three leading scorers – Sylvia Fowles (27 points, 11 rebounds), Jackson (25 points and 14 boards) and Diana Taurasi (23). Jackson had a tough time inside the arc, missing 13 of her 17 two-point attempts, but knocked down a trio of three-pointers and was 8-of-10 at the free-throw line. Bird played her customary role leading the Spartak attack, finishing with 13 points, five assists and three three-pointers.

Cash had 11 points, nine rebounds and three assists for USK Praha, but the Spartak D pressured her into seven turnovers. Praha got big scoring efforts from Evanthia Maltsi (27 points) and Lindsay Whalen (20 points, eight boards, five assists). Despite the best efforts of Cash and Whalen from the perimeter, USK Praha was beaten badly on the defensive glass, surrendering 20 offensive boards – seven by Jackson and five from Fowles.

Spartak will try to close out the best-of-three series on Friday, when the action shifts to Prague for Game 2.

LJ Update

Monday, December 29th, 2008

We’re a week away from teams being able to sign free agents to contracts, but don’t expect a decision from Lauren Jackson on her future so quickly. That was the message from Jackson in an interview with the Daily Telegraph of Sydney.

“I think at the moment I have to decide on both (options), yeah both – whether to play in the WNBA and if so, with which team,” Jackson told the paper. “I don’t want to jump into anything that I can’t fulfil right now. I don’t know how I might feel in a couple of months’ time.

“I have to make a decision and it’s going to be a big one. It could impact on the rest of my career.”

In the rest of the story, Jackson talks about her love for the city of Seattle and her happiness with the Storm. It’s a must-read.

Jackson Hasn't Thought About Free Agency

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

Hello from The Furtado Center, where the Storm is completing exit interviews today with Lauren Jackson and Yolanda Griffith meeting with Head Coach Brian Agler and CEO Karen Bryant.

Earlier, we had our first chance to speak to Jackson about her future. Because point guard Sue Bird is playing out the second year of a deal signed as a core player and teams are now limited to one core designation per season, Jackson cannot be cored and will be an unrestricted free agent for the first time in her WNBA career. (Previously, Jackson signed the three-year deal just completed as a restricted free agent.) Also a factor is whether Jackson decides at some point to take a WNBA season off to rest and let her body get healthier. Those decisions are coming, but Jackson wants time to ponder them.

“To be honest, I haven’t even thought about it,” she told reporters. “There’s a lot of things that will factor into my decision-making, but I haven’t even really thought about it. I’m just trying to get fixed and healed and get ready to get back on the court again.”

We’ll have more on Jackson’s status as well as a look ahead to 2009 for the Storm later tonight on storm.wnba.com, so stay tuned.

LJ Takes Home ESPY

Monday, July 21st, 2008

Storm forward Lauren Jackson won the ESPY Award as the Best WNBA Player for the third time in her career at the 2008 ESPYs, hosted Wednesday and televised last night. Previously, Jackson won for her 2004 MVP campaign and also in 2005. Just four players have ever won the Best WNBA Player ESPY – Jackson, current Storm teammate Sheryl Swoopes (2x), Lisa Leslie (3x) and Cynthia Cooper (3x).

Jackson was also nominated for Best Female International Athlete, which was won by Mexican golfer Lorena Ochoa.

Since Jackson returned Down Under, she’s been in the spotlight in the Australian media. She appeared on the Sunrise morning show and on the World Wide of Sports. Here’s a good feature from the Herald Sun.

“Achieving the gold medal is the one last thing I really, really want to get,” Jackson told the Herald Sun.

LJ Officially an Olympian

Saturday, July 5th, 2008

On Thursday, Basketball Australia announced the roster for the Opals for next month’s Beijing Olympics. And, in news that comes as something less than a surprise, Lauren Jackson headlines that roster.

More noteworthy is that former Storm guard Tully Bevilaqua was chosen for the roster despite choosing to play with the Indiana Fever this season. In 2004, Bevilaqua’s decision to play for the Storm instead of staying in Australia played a role in costing her an Olympic bid. This time around, a roster spot was likely but no sure thing.

“I’m just playing it as 50-50,” Bevilaqua said last month. “I’m supposed to find out towards the end of this month whether I am included or not. I’m trying not to think about it because I don’t want it to affect how I play here. I’m just trying to stay loose, not worry about things. That’s how I’m playing at the moment. When the time comes to get the call, hopefully it will be good.”

Former Storm center Suzy Batkovic is also on the roster after not taking part in the 2006 FIBA World Championships, won by Australia.

Locally, the bigger news has been Storm forward Swin Cash receiving word from USA Basketball that she will not fill one of the last thee spots on the U.S. roster for Beijing, which have yet to be announced.

When Storm rookie Kristen O’Neill made her WNBA debut on Thursday, her college coach June Daugherty was in the KeyArena crowd. Daugherty, now coaching Washington State University, chatted with Dick Fain and Adia Barnes on the 1150 AM KKNW broadcast on Thursday. If you were there yourself or just missed it, here’s the audio from that interview.

Vote LJ

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

The Storm’s Lauren Jackson has been nominated for a pair of ESPY Awards. Naturally, she’s up for Best WNBA Player along with Seimone Augustus, Becky Hammon and Diana Taurasi. Jackson is also competing with tennis star Justine Henin, golfer Lorena Ochoa and soccer standout Marta to be named Best Female International Player. You can vote for LJ and in all the other categories at espys.tv.

Previously, Jackson won the Best WNBA Player ESPY in 2004.

The 2008 ESPYs, hosted by Justin Timberlake, will air Sunday, July 20 at 6 p.m. Pacific on ESPN.

Expect Great from LJ

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

The third and final installment of the WNBA’s Expect Great campaign features Storm MVP Lauren Jackson and Cappie Pondexter of the Phoenix Mercury. Check out their ads, which will make their national debut tonight during ESPN2’s broadcast of Atlanta and Phoenix (4:00 p.m. Pacific). Jackson talks about her desire to add another championship to the one the Storm won in 2004.


Also check out a behind-the-scenes photo gallery from the filming of the commercials. In case you’ve missed any of them, including the one starring Storm guard Sue Bird, check out WNBA.com’s Expect Great homepage.

Notebook: LJ Due in Tonight

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

After getting Sue Bird back today, the Storm will at last be at full strength tomorrow, when forward Lauren Jackson is scheduled to be a part of practice.

“Lauren arrives tonight,” Storm Head Coach Brian Agler said Tuesday. “She’s between London and L.A. right now. She’ll get in here tonight, get her physical tomorrow. We’ll be practicing tomorrow at 2:00, back it up so she can be a part of that.”

STORM WAIVES KENNEDY

After practice, Agler was asked about the possibility of making some roster moves.

“We’ve got to make some decisions this week, obviously by Friday at Noon,” he said. “That could happen at any time. We’re going to go into a meeting here after this and talk some more about it. We’ve got to make some decisions on certain individuals.”

That discussion resulted in the decision to waive rookie guard Daphanie Kennedy Tuesday afternoon. After releasing Kennedy, the Storm is left with 14 players on the roster, needing to get down to 12 by Friday. Two of those spots remain in play, with the coaching staff likely deciding between guards Kimberly Beck, Roneeka Hodges and Doneeka Lewis and wing Kristen O’Neill for those spots.

That decision won’t be an easy one.

“Everybody out here on our team at this point is a quality player, a great person and has a great work ethic,” Agler said. “It’s just part of the business. It’s too bad that we can’t keep a deeper roster, but we’ve got to play within our parameters.”

Some coaches prefer to have their roster set well before the deadline to focus on the 12 players who will be part of the team all season long. Agler sees the value in that approach, but isn’t in a hurry to make the final moves.

“There’s some incentive to do that, but I want to make sure I make the right decision too,” he explained. “I want to make sure that we feel strong enough in one direction to make that decision. I don’t want to do it just to get the numbers down. We can adjust practice to make sure that we keep the focus on a main group.”

- During her chat with the media, Storm veteran Sheryl Swoopes offered some unsolicited praise for Shyra Ely’s performance during camp, singling her out.

“I feel like Shyra’s probably had the best training camp of anybody here,” Swoopes said.

Post-Practice Audio: Coach Agler Sue Bird