Archive for the ‘o'neill’ Category

O'Neill to Miss Camp: Your Reaction

Friday, April 24th, 2009


Aaron Last/Storm Photos

It’s a sad day in the Storm offices, with the news that Kristen O’Neill will not be attending training camp after suffering a knee injury overseas which would prevent her from being 100 percent in camp. If you haven’t already, check out my feature where O’Neill explains the reasoning behind her decision, primarily based in giving another player the opportunity she had last year to come to training camp and try to make the roster.

Naturally, as a Seattle-area native and a product of the University of Washington, O’Neill has been a big-time fan favorite dating back to last year’s training camp. If you’d like to share your thoughts on having O’Neill on the roster and your encouragement going forward, please do so in the comments here.

O'Neill Re-Signed

Friday, September 12th, 2008

Release presumably forthcoming, but Storm Head Coach Brian Agler confirmed at shootaround this morning that the team has re-signed Kristen O’Neill for the remainder of the season.

Surprise: Another Seven-Day Deal for O'Neill

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Tuesday was expected to bring a decision on Kristen O’Neill’s future with the Seattle Storm. Would O’Neill be re-signed for the remainder of the season or leave the team with the expiration of her second seven-day contract? The answer, as it turned out, was neither. After a conversation with the WNBA league office, the Storm found out that teams are not limited to two seven-day contracts for a given player but can sign them to as many seven-day deals as they want. With that knowledge, the Storm opted to give O’Neill another seven-day contract, keeping her on the roster but maintaining flexibility for the future.

“It has nothing really to do with anything negative towards Kristen,” said Storm Head Coach Brian Agler, explaining why the team would continue with seven-day contracts instead of signing Agler for the remainder of the season. “Everything’s real positive. We like her on our team. Just in case something could happen where we would need to go out and get a specific type of player, it gives us that insurance policy.”

Both the Storm and the media had been working under the assumption that players were limited to two seven-day contracts. Last year, the team signed Doneeka Lewis for the remainder of the season after her second seven-day contract came to an end. While the NBA specifically places a limit on 10-day contracts, their equivalent of the WNBA’s seven-day contracts, neither the previous WNBA Collective Bargaining Agreement nor the current one that took effect this season contains such language.

The way the rules were previously interpreted, O’Neill would have gotten a decision on her long-term fate today. She admitted some nervousness about the news last night, before she found out about the possibility of further seven-day contracts.

“To feel like I was finally going to have an answer either way was of course on my mind,” she said. “But I came in here today and had a good talk with coach and the staff and I’m here to help the team. I’m happy to still be here.”

Even had O’Neill gotten a guarantee for the remainder of the season, she surely would have continued the hard work that has made her so valuable to the Storm’s coaching staff. Still, the short-term nature of her status only reinforces the importance of that work.

“It has been a challenge,” O’Neil said, “but it has been making me stronger because every day you have to bring it. Every day you have to come ready to compete as hard as you can and you can’t let up.”

During her two weeks with the Storm, O’Neill has played 13 minutes over four games, three of them at KeyArena. Her every move during home games has drawn huge applause from fans who fell in love with O’Neill during her time at the University of Washington or even before that at Edmonds High School.

“It’s been a pretty incredible feeling,” said O’Neill. “There’s nothing like playing in front of your home crowd, but I’ve been so moved by the way that the community has supported my dream. This is what I’ve wanted for so long and a lot of people have helped me achieve that, whether through coaching or by being a fan and really getting behind me. That’s meant so much, so to see the support from the community has been incredible.”

O'Neill Will Sign Third Seven-Day Contract

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

Quickly after practice. The release hasn’t yet gone out, but the Storm will sign guard Kristen O’Neill to another seven-day contract after finding out from the league office today that there is no limit to the number of seven-day contracts for a player.

In the NBA, players are limited to two 10-day contracts, and that had been the assumption in the WNBA as well. I’m looking into whether this is a change with this year’s new Collective Bargaining Agreement.

O'Neill Makes It

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Exciting day here at Storm HQ as we got the news moments ago that Kristen O’Neill has been signed to a seven-day contract, making the Storm after putting together a strong bid for a roster spot during training camp. Everybody was pulling for O’Neill because of her work ethic and terrific attitude. Her decision to continue to work with the Storm practice squad after being cut has now paid off in a chance to play in the WNBA. There are no guarantees for O’Neill past the next seven days, but she’s got a shot.

Before Sunday’s game, Storm Head Coach Brian Agler was in the mix as the Storm looked to sign a player to a seven-day contract. Here’s what he had to say about O’Neill.

“She’s been a practice player for us. She’ll come in and play on the guys’ team. If we, for whatever reason, need to rest people or have someone out, she sometimes can slide in there and get in a drill for us.

“The thing that we tell Kristen is just keep working. You’re not hurting yourself. Stay right there. Something good could happen this year. It might not be this year; it might be down the road.

“She puts a lot of time into it. You guys see her. You come in late and you’re hanging around there and you look down the floor and there’s one person still shooting. You know what kind of commitment she has to the game and the love that she has for it. We all respect that out of her. There’s no question.”

Notebook: Storm Wants to Keep O'Neill Around

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

The Seattle Storm waived wing Kristen O’Neill Thursday morning, but there was O’Neill on the floor at KeyArena during the Storm’s practice later in the day. It was the start of what could be a new role for O’Neill as a practice player this summer, continuing her relationship with the organization. Despite having to make the difficult decision to cut O’Neill, Head Coach Brian Agler would love to have her around.

“We just want her to stay involved in case there’s an opportunity that could come about sometime during the course of the year and she’s ready to go,” Agler explained after practice. “That’s why we’re going to encourage her to stay here and be a practice player for us. I know that our organization is looking for her to possibly have some other responsibilities, which would be great.

“It’s nice to have somebody that’s real familiar with what you’re doing that can be there in a moment.”

Agler noted that O’Neill does have to make a living, which could force her to give up the role of practice player. After practice, however, O’Neill sounded like she was planning to stick around.

“I’m very grateful for the opportunity that the coaches and the organization presented to me to continue training and working with the team,” she said. “I was obviously delighted to take that opportunity. I’m going to be here and continue to keep working to get better and make this team better.”

According to Agler, it was a numbers situation that forced the Storm’s decision with O’Neill. During her time in camp, she had impressed the coaching staff with her play and especially off the floor.

“The quality of person that she is, those types of people are few and far between coming into your life,” said Agler. “She’s one of those.”

Having received the news from Agler Wednesday, O’Neill remained upbeat. Her former college coach at UW, current Washington State Head Coach June Daugherty, was at Thursday’s practice and chatted with O’Neill afterwards. For her part, O’Neill enjoyed with her experience with the Storm during training camp.

“The experience has been incredible,” she said. I truly have enjoyed every day. I’m just so thankful for the opportunity from the coaching staff, my teammates and the organization. It’s been an incredible opportunity.

“I feel like I’ve grown so much as a player throughout this experience. Having a strong work ethic and trying to push myself to work as hard as I can every day but also having the element of playing with the best makes the situation that much more competitive. Just playing with such a high level, that’s what makes you better. Through being around these incredible women, I’ve learned so much about professional basketball, the way they carry themselves on and off the court. It’s been a great learning experience.”

- After cutting O’Neill and guard Roneeka Hodges, the Storm’s roster now sits at 13 players less than 24 hours away from the WNBA’s Noon Pacific deadline for setting final rosters for the season. The Storm still must make one more cut, and because of the early time on the West Coast, must do so before practicing tomorrow.

“I think there’s two or three ways we could go,” Agler said. “If we go a couple ways, though, it might handicap us in terms of depth at certain positions. That’s what we’re going to sort of talk about as a staff here after practice today, what way we’re going to go. We’ve got to make it basically before practice tomorrow because the deadline is 3:00 Eastern time and that sits right in the middle of our practice. For whatever reason, they don’t want to work with us. We’ll probably have a decision sometime tonight or tomorrow morning.”

Without having studied the updated transaction wire during practice, Agler said he does not anticipate the Storm bringing in anyone from outside, but instead for the roster to, “probably be a combination of this group we have right now.”

The early deadline means the Storm will have to make a decision on newcomer Florina Pascalau after just two practices in Seattle. Agler felt the staff got a good look at Pascalau during today’s session.

“She’s a good player,” he said. “She’s got a lot of potential. We’ll see. We haven’t come to a conclusion yet on that.”

Storm Waives O'Neill

Thursday, May 15th, 2008


Aaron Last/Storm Photos

Roster decisions are never easy this time of year, but in the case of Edmonds native and UW product Kristen O’Neill, it’s definitely personal. The Storm waived O’Neill this morning, ending her bid to make the team as a training-camp invitee.

“Making some of the final cuts is always difficult, but letting Kristen go was an incredibly tough decision,” Storm Head Coach Brian Agler said in the press release.

Everyone who worked with Kristen during training camp came away impressed with her as a player and a person and there was certainly a strong contingent rooting for her to make the team. I know there’s going to be a lot of disappointed fans out there who have watched O’Neill play at UW and even before that at Meadowdale High School.

The good news is this isn’t necessarily a goodbye.

“We were all very impressed by her,” Storm CEO Karen Bryant said in the release, “and have expressed a desire to keep her involved in the Storm organization this summer.”