Tag Archives: WNBA

Sportswriter Who Made Creepy Remark To Caitlin Clark At News Conference Is Reportedly Suspended, Barred From Covering Her WNBA Team – Deadline

  1. Sportswriter Who Made Creepy Remark To Caitlin Clark At News Conference Is Reportedly Suspended, Barred From Covering Her WNBA Team Deadline
  2. IndyStar columnist Gregg Doyel won’t cover Indiana Fever following awkward exchange with Caitlin Clark FOX 59 Indianapolis
  3. Bizarre Caitlin Clark interactions lead to discipline for veteran columnist Fox News
  4. Indy Sports Columnist Suspended Over Uncomfortable Caitlin Clark Interaction The Daily Beast
  5. Indy Star columnist will not cover Caitlin Clark and Indiana Fever this season WISH TV Indianapolis, IN

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Brittney Griner’s agent says airport incident ‘clear reminder’ WNBA players’ activism makes them ‘targets’ – Fox News

  1. Brittney Griner’s agent says airport incident ‘clear reminder’ WNBA players’ activism makes them ‘targets’ Fox News
  2. Mercury to make travel ‘adjustments’ after Brittney Griner incident – ESPN ESPN
  3. DFW Airport incident regarding Brittney Griner under review by Phoenix Mercury, team says WFAA
  4. Phoenix Mercury make travel ‘adjustments’ following DFW Airport incident with Brittney Griner WFAA.com
  5. Brittney Griner harassed at Dallas airport, agent calls for ‘enhanced security measures for all players’ CNN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Brittney Griner allegedly harassed at Dallas airport by “social media figure and provocateur,” WNBA says – CBS News

  1. Brittney Griner allegedly harassed at Dallas airport by “social media figure and provocateur,” WNBA says CBS News
  2. Brittney Griner, Mercury confronted by ‘provocateur’ at airport – ESPN ESPN
  3. Brittney Griner harassed at Dallas airport, agent calls for ‘enhanced security measures for all players’ CNN
  4. DFW Airport incident regarding Brittney Griner under review by Phoenix Mercury, team says WFAA.com
  5. WNBA says Brittney Griner subject of ‘inappropriate’ incident involving social media ‘provocateur’ Fox News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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WNBA punishes Aces, Becky Hammon for mistreatment of Dearica Hamby – The Washington Post

  1. WNBA punishes Aces, Becky Hammon for mistreatment of Dearica Hamby The Washington Post
  2. WNBA suspends Becky Hammon for violating Respect in the Workplace policies KENS 5: Your San Antonio News Source
  3. WNBA rescinds Aces’ 2025 1st-round pick, suspends Becky Hammon – ESPN ESPN
  4. WNBA suspends Aces’ Hammon 2 games for player’s allegation she was bullied for being pregnant Fox 5 Las Vegas
  5. Becky Hammon suspended 2 games for comments on Dearica Hamby’s pregnancy; Aces also forfeit draft pick in 2nd investigation Yahoo Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Dallas Wings select Lou Lopez Senechal with the No. 5 pick in the WNBA Draft | WNBA on ESPN – ESPN

  1. Dallas Wings select Lou Lopez Senechal with the No. 5 pick in the WNBA Draft | WNBA on ESPN ESPN
  2. How UConn women’s basketball’s Lou Lopez Sénéchal, Dorka Juhász are preparing for WNBA Draft in New York CT Insider
  3. 2023 WNBA Draft: Lou Lopez Sénéchal selected fifth overall by Dallas Wings The UConn Blog
  4. Dallas Wings select Maddy Siegrist with the No. 3 pick in the WNBA Draft | WNBA on ESPN ESPN
  5. UConn women’s basketball’s Lou Lopez Sénéchal selected by Dallas Wings with fifth pick in WNBA Draft CT Insider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston, Maryland’s Diamond Miller And Villanova’s Maddy Siegrist Headline Prospects To Attend WNBA Draft 2023 Presented By State Farm® – WNBA.com – Official Site of the WNBA – WNBA.com

  1. South Carolina’s Aliyah Boston, Maryland’s Diamond Miller And Villanova’s Maddy Siegrist Headline Prospects To Attend WNBA Draft 2023 Presented By State Farm® – WNBA.com – Official Site of the WNBA WNBA.com
  2. Projected No. 1 pick Aliyah Boston among 15 players to attend WNBA draft ESPN
  3. 2023 WNBA Mock Draft: Aliyah Boston goes No. 1 to Fever, Lynx get Diamond Miller & MORE | CBS Sports CBS Sports
  4. SI’s 2023 WNBA Mock Draft Sports Illustrated
  5. WNBA Draft: Where South Carolina women’s basketball seniors could land Greenville News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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How Breanna Stewart’s move impacts the Liberty, Storm and the WNBA

Are the New York Liberty the 2023 WNBA title favorites now that Breanna Stewart plans to sign with the team? Stewart announced the move Wednesday on Twitter.

Having already added an MVP this offseason by trading for Jonquel Jones, the Liberty added a second via free agency on Tuesday, landing two-time WNBA Finals MVP Stewart. With second-team pick Sabrina Ionescu already on the roster, New York now boasts 30% of last year’s All-WNBA selections — matching the Las Vegas Aces’ total — and might not be done adding star players just yet.

Let’s take a closer look at how the Liberty project with their new star-studded frontcourt, particularly in comparison to the Aces after the defending champions loaded up with the addition of Candace Parker.

Additionally, let’s consider what’s next for the Seattle Storm after Stewart’s departure. With All-Star guard Jewell Loyd still in Seattle, rebuilding doesn’t seem to be in the cards, barring a trade. But the Storm will have a very different look in 2023 after the departure of Stewart and retirement of legendary point guard Sue Bird.

How do Stewart and Jones fit together?

It’s safe to say that adding two former MVPs, both in their prime, during the same offseason is unprecedented in WNBA history. In fact, before this year, just two former MVPs had ever changed teams prior to age 30: Tina Charles when she was traded to the Liberty in 2014 and Elena Delle Donne upon her trade to the Washington Mystics in 2017.

Back in 2008, Seattle added a pair of former MVPs in Yolanda Griffith and Sheryl Swoopes. However, Griffith was 38 when she joined the Storm and Swoopes was soon to be 37. At that stage of their careers, both were role players, not anchor pieces like Jones and Stewart.

Undoubtedly, teaming up will require some sacrifice for Jones and Stewart — probably more so Stewart since Jones already saw her usage drop after it reached a career-high 27% during her MVP campaign. Still, last season Jones finished 24% of the Connecticut Sun’s plays with a shot, trip to the free throw line or turnover. Stewart was at 29% in Seattle.

Some of those opportunities in New York will come from replacing Natasha Howard, who had a 26% usage rate and was traded to the Dallas Wings as part of the Jones deal. But the Liberty’s other starter up front was center Stefanie Dolson, who will likely head to the bench, and Dolson’s usage rate was a modest 17%. That was a 43% combined share of the offense for last year’s New York frontcourt starters, as compared to 53% for Jones and Stewart with their former teams.

So long as Jones and Stewart are comfortable with fewer touches and shots, with Ionescu surely dialing back her offense as well, the fit should work well. Jones and Stewart are both capable of stepping away from the basket and each has enough gravity as an outside shooter (Stewart is a career 37% 3-point shooter, while Jones has hit 38% on lower volume) to space the floor while the other posts up or runs pick-and-roll with Ionescu.

At the other end, Jones and Stewart were among seven players to receive votes for Defensive Player of the Year in 2022, with Stewart making the All-Defensive first team and Jones on the second team. Both players have guarded multiple frontcourt spots over the course of their careers, giving Liberty coach Sandy Brondello flexibility in how to deploy them for maximum benefit.

Right now, I’d keep the Aces as WNBA championship favorites because it should be easier for them to integrate Parker than it will for New York to get comfortable with multiple new starters. Still, the terrifying possibility for the rest of the league is the Liberty aren’t finished adding to the roster.

Could New York add another All-Star?

ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne reported earlier this month that Courtney Vandersloot’s free agency would be a factor in Stewart’s decision. The Liberty were among four teams Vandersloot was expected to meet with before making her own choice. Could New York still add Vandersloot, too?

Yes, particularly if Stewart and Vandersloot are willing to take less money than their maximum possible salaries. If Stewart signs for the maximum $202,154 for players changing teams besides a sign-and-trade, that would leave the Liberty about $160,000 to offer Vandersloot, per salary data from HerHoopsStats.com.

By waiving reserves Michaela Onyenwere and DiDi Richards, New York could get that offer above $180,000, in the ballpark of what Vandersloot made last season with the Chicago Sky ($195,000). To offer more than that, New York would have to trade a player with a protected contract.

One wild card for the Liberty’s 2023 roster: The team has a pair of key international players — guard Marine Johannes and center Han Xu — who are reserved, meaning they can negotiate only with New York. If those players re-sign for the minimum salary, it will be much easier for the Liberty to fill out the roster with Stewart and another highly paid free agent.

From a fit standpoint, Vandersloot would make sense in New York given the success Ionescu enjoyed after the Liberty signed point guard Crystal Dangerfield midseason and moved Dangerfield into the starting lineup. Freed from primary distribution responsibilities, Ionescu emerged as a nightly triple-double threat. Adding Vandersloot would make New York my favorite to win the first title in franchise history.

What’s next for the Storm

We saw a Seattle team without Bird and Stewart reach the playoffs in 2019, when both missed the season due to injury. The Storm even won a playoff game before being eliminated in the second round by the Los Angeles Sparks.

Besides holdovers Loyd and center Mercedes Russell, that team also featured Howard, who won Defensive Player of the Year and earned All-WNBA first team honors. If Seattle is to replicate its 2019 success, a similar breakthrough will probably be required from fourth-year post Ezi Magbegor, like Han and Johannes a reserved player this offseason.

As a starting center through the All-Star break last season, Magbegor seemed to be on that kind of trajectory. She averaged 11.3 PPG and 6.5 RPG as a starter while leading the league with 2.3 BPG. Magbegor struggled to make the same impact after Charles replaced her in the starting lineup, seeing her per-minute averages fall in addition to less playing time.

There’s much work to be done for the Storm, who have just Loyd and Russell under contract but also possess the most cap space in the WNBA. In particular, Seattle needs to find a replacement for Bird at point guard. Vandersloot, a native of the Seattle area, could still be in the mix there. Otherwise, the Storm are likely looking at a drop-off at point guard to restricted free agents Natisha Hiedeman and Marina Mabrey or unrestricted option Moriah Jefferson.

With so many open roster spots, it’s tough to say how competitive Seattle can be without Stewart. For now, Loyd’s presence, Magbegor’s development and the Storm’s ability to land veteran free agents in the past suggest the team still should be in the mix for the playoffs.

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Brittney Griner is back in the US and dunking again after almost 10 months detained in Russia



CNN
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Fresh off her elated return to the US after months in Russian custody, two-time Olympic gold medalist Brittney Griner is back on a basketball court.

But her reintegration into American life is far from over, as is the fight by WNBA players for equity as US professional athletes. The issue was highlighted by the 10-month detention of Griner, who’d gone to Russia to play basketball in the WNBA offseason.

Griner’s first move on a Texas basketball court Sunday was a dunk, her agent, Lindsay Kagawa Colas, told CNN on Monday.

Confirming news first reported by ESPN, Colas said Griner wore a pair of black Chuck Taylor shoes, Phoenix Suns shorts and a T-shirt touting Title IX as she played. Months ago, in pre-trial detention in Russia, Griner was offered a basketball and a hoop, but she declined to play, Colas said.

“I think it’s fair to say that her picking up a ball voluntarily and the first thing being a dunk … it was really encouraging,” Colas said. “She was really excited.”

The 32-year-old had arrived two days earlier at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio for routine evaluation after her release Thursday from what US officials deemed wrongful detention. She was freed amid Russia’s war in Ukraine in a prisoner swap for notorious convicted Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout.

It’s not clear how long Griner will stay at the medical center, Colas said.

“She’s had a lot of psychological support,” Colas said. “The resources are very robust. It’s very supportive and very BG centered. It’s about her developing agency.”

Griner’s agent believes she will try to “utilize her fame for good” but did not detail what that would look like. Colas said Griner opted into the Department of Defense’s Post Isolation Support Activities, or PISA, program that has served other wrongfully detained Americans.

It’s also unclear whether the Phoenix Mercury center will return to the WNBA. The 2023 regular season begins May 19, with training camps typically opening a month before.

“If she wants to play, it will be for her to share,” Colas told ESPN’s T.J. Quinn. “She has the holidays to rest and decide what’s next without any pressure. She’s doing really, really well. She seems to have endured this in pretty incredible ways.”

But the fact that Griner typically plays basketball in Russia during her WNBA offseasons highlights the inequities faced by professional female athletes in the US, fellow WNBA players said.

For many years, WNBA players have spent their offseasons playing in international leagues, where they often can earn more money.

“We’ve been talking about the pay disparity for a long time, and players have been going overseas for a long time,” Elizabeth Williams, a Washington Mystics player and secretary for the Women’s National Basketball Players Association, told CNN on Monday.

“I think this is when people are realizing … the dangers and perils of people going overseas and the impact of what those pay equity issues are.”

Griner was arrested on drug charges at a Russian airport in February and sentenced to nine years in prison. As concerns grew that Griner was being used as a political pawn, efforts to negotiate her release took months.

Now back on US soil, it’s not clear how long Griner will stay in Texas for medical evaluation.

“I’m understanding that it’s going to be a few more days before she gets out,” former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson told CNN on Sunday.

Richardson and his center privately work on behalf of families of hostages and detainees. He previously traveled to Russia to discuss Griner’s release, as well as Paul Whelan, a US Marine veteran who was wrongfully detained and remains in custody.

Richardson said it’s important to give former detainees like Griner ample time to get settled.

“We’ve got to give them a little space, a little time to readjust because they’ve had a horrendous experience in these Russian prisons,” said Richardson, who served as US ambassador to the United Nations in the Clinton administration.

While held in a Russian penal colony, Griner was unable to perform the work done by many female prisoners due to her size, Griner’s Russian lawyer Maria Blagovolina told ESPN and confirmed to CNN.

Most of the women in the penal colony worked sewing uniforms, but the 6-foot-9 Griner was too tall to sit at a work table, and her hands were too big to manage the sewing. So instead, she carried fabric all day, her attorney said.

On the day of her release, Griner had a feeling she would be going home, said Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs Roger Carstens, who led the prisoner exchange mission in the United Arab Emirates.

But it didn’t feel real until he boarded the plane and told her: “On behalf of the President of the United States, Joe Biden, and Secretary of State Tony Blinken, I’m here to take you home,” Carstens recalled to CNN.

He described Griner as an intelligent, compassionate, humble and patriotic person who immediately wanted to thank all the crew members who helped her.

“When she finally got onto the US plane, I said, ‘Brittney, you must have been through a lot over the last 10 months. Here’s your seat. Please feel free to decompress. We’ll give you your space,’” Carstens recalled.

“And she said, ‘Oh no. I’ve been in prison for 10 months now listening to Russian, I want to talk. But first of all, who are these guys?’ And she moved right past me and went to every member on that crew, looked them in the eyes, shook their hands and asked about them and got their names, making a personal connection with them. It was really amazing,” Carstens said.

Griner spent 12 hours of an 18-hour flight talking with Carstens “about everything under the sun,” he said.

When the government plane landed at Kelly Field, the person who emerged from the plane looked very different. Her long, signature deadlocks had been cut while in captivity. Griner continuously battled the flu while detained because her hair kept freezing and she was unable to dry them, Colas said.

The new do was not a surprise to her family, though, as she sent word home weeks earlier about her decision to cut her hair, Colas said.

In San Antonio this weekend, she received a real hair cut to clean up her “Russian fade” as her friends and family jokingly call it. After that, she hit the basketball court.

Griner’s life has been forever altered, and adjusting to everyday life could be difficult.

Jorge Toledo – one of the “Citgo 6” – was released in October as part of a prisoner swap after being detained during a 2017 business trip to Venezuela with other oil and gas executives from the Citgo Petroleum Corporation.

After returning home, Toledo told CNN, he’s had trouble sleeping and felt anxiety during normally mundane tasks such as driving.

But Toledo said he was part of a program in San Antonio that involved six days with a group of psychologists. He said the program was “extremely important” for his reintegration and hopes Griner can take advantage of similar resources.

While many celebrate Griner’s return, the fate of another American held in Russia remains uncertain.

Whelan – a US, Irish, British and Canadian citizen – is imprisoned in a Russian penal colony after he was arrested in December 2018 on espionage charges, which he has denied. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison.

With Griner back in the US, Richardson said he’s optimistic about Whelan’s release – noting Russia previously offer a trade for Whelan.

The US tried to persuade Russia to swap both Griner and Whelan for Bout, but Russian officials would not budge on the matter. Russia said the Americans’ cases were handled differently based on the charges each of them faced.

“This was not a choice of which American to bring home,” Biden said last week. “Sadly, for totally illegitimate reasons, Russia is treating Paul’s case differently than Brittney’s. And while we have not yet succeeded in securing Paul’s release, we are not giving up. We will never give up.”

Whelan said he was happy Griner was released, but told CNN, “I am greatly disappointed that more has not been done to secure my release, especially as the four-year anniversary of my arrest is coming up.”

Griner is eager to use power and influence to help others, her agent said, especially Whelan.

“It was one of the first things she asked me about,” Colas said. “She’s very, very concerned about that. And will be sending a message to Paul.”

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Brittney Griner release: After release from Russian custody, focus is on providing Brittney Griner and her family additional support, officials say



CNN
 — 

After being imprisoned in Russia for nearly 10 months, WNBA star Brittney Griner’s safe return to the US on Friday was marked by a stop at a Texas military medical facility for a routine evaluation, the US State Department said.

Griner arrived at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, early Friday – the next leg of a journey back on American soil following what the US government described as wrongful detainment that had often left her family and loved ones with little information or consolation.

“We are now focused on ensuring that Brittney and her family’s well-being are prioritized and that all available assistance can be offered to them through an appropriate manner,” US State Department principal deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said at a news briefing Friday.

Officials have not specified for how long Griner will be at the medical center, but the basketball star was “in good spirits” and “incredibly gracious” following her release, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told CNN.

Griner, who was arrested at a Moscow airport in February on drug charges and later sentenced to 9 years in prison, was released as part of a prisoner exchange between the US and Russia for notorious convicted arms dealer Viktor Bout.

The swap, which took months to negotiate and has drawn mixed reaction in the US for not also including fellow detainee Paul Whelan, occurred at an airport tarmac in Abu Dhabi on Thursday.

Shortly after the swap was successfully completed, US officials connected Griner to her family. That call “was as moving as it was unforgettable” to hear Griner speak on the phone with her wife, Cherelle, who was present for an Oval Office meeting, Secretary of State Tony Blinken said.

“Their strength, their resilience, has been nothing but short of inspiring,” Blinken said.

Texas Democratic Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee told CNN Griner was able to call her father from the plane.

“They all want to see her and might even want to see her back here at home, but I know that was a happy phone reunion to hear his daughter’s voice,” she said.

Jackson Lee – who represents the 18th Congressional District of Texas including Griner’s hometown of Houston – said aspects of the two-time Olympian’s current welfare “have to be reviewed.”

“We hear that she has spoken to her family members here, she sounded good, looking forward to seeing them, and we also know that she walked on her own capabilities both in terms of the swap and then when she landed in San Antonio.”

In a statement, Griner’s family thanked President Joe Biden and the administration, along with former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, whose Richardson Center worked on behalf of the family to help ensure Griner’s release and is trying to follow suit for Whelan.

“We sincerely thank you all for the kind words, thoughts and prayers – including Paul and the Whelan family who have been generous with their support for Brittney and our family during what we know is a heartbreaking time,” the statement said.

“We pray for Paul and for the swift and safe return of all wrongfully-detained Americans.”

While many are celebrating Griner’s return home – seen as a diplomatic win between two of the world’s largest nations at fierce odds over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – the fate of Whelan’s release remains unclear.

Whelan – a US, Irish, British and Canadian citizen – is currently imprisoned in a Russian penal colony after he was arrested in December 2018 on espionage charges, which he has denied. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison. He, like Griner, had been declared wrongfully detained by US officials.

The US tried to persuade Russia to swap both Griner and Whelan for arms dealer Bout, but Russian officials would not budge on the matter, with Russia saying both of the Americans’ cases were handled differently based on the charges each of them faced.

In an interview with CNN, Whelan expressed his disappointment in how the negotiations went.

“This is a precarious situation that needs to be resolved quickly,” Whelan told CNN in a phone interview. “I would hope that (Biden) and his administration would do everything they could to get me home, regardless of the price they might have to pay at this point.”

Biden insisted that his administration continues its efforts to bring Whelan home.

“This was not a choice of which American to bring home,” Biden said Thursday. “Sadly, for totally illegitimate reasons, Russia is treating Paul’s case differently than Brittney’s. And while we have not yet succeeded in securing Paul’s release, we are not giving up. We will never give up.”

Paul Whelan’s sister, Elizabeth Whelan, told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Friday that the public discussion surrounding a potential swap has “been very difficult for my family to hear,” adding she believes her brother is being “discussed as if his only value was what we would have to give up for him.”

Asked about her family’s discussions with the US government regarding her brother’s imprisonment, Elizabeth Whelan said, “I think we’ve made it pretty clear – that as far as I’m concerned, at least – my brother is worth more, has a greater value than any Russian criminal.”

– Source:
CNN
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CNN speaks to Paul Whelan in exclusive phone call from Russian prison

Griner’s detention and subsequent return home has once again spotlighted the pay disparity women athletes face in the US – which has pushed WNBA players to go overseas to earn more during their off-seasons, including countries such as Russia.

WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert told CNN Friday evening that although efforts have been ongoing to increase the pay, there’s still a long way to go.

“For too long women sports have been undervalued, under-invested in,” said Engelbert, who noted that less than 1% of all corporate sponsorship funding goes to women’s sports.

Engelbert also pointed out that the WNBA is a fairly young sports league, which was established in 1996. Still, she added the organization is working on a three-to-five-year plan to drive up players’ pay.

“We’re chipping away as we start to grow and build real momentum,” she said.

And as those changes are slowly underway, Engelbert said she believes players will continue to play overseas, especially because the average tenure in the WNBA is about five years.

“We’re never going to preclude them from making more money in leagues outside the US during our offseason. What we want is them to come and play at the highest level once they’re back here at home.”

Angel McCoughtry, a friend of Griner’s who also played in the Olympics and WNBA, played for a Russian club as well during her offseason and acknowledged that she earned more there. But she also said she would not return considering how Griner was treated.

“Russia was a place that paid us a lot of money for our talent, more than being here in our own country,” McCoughtry told CNN on Friday. “It’s sad to say I’m wealthy not because of the WNBA, but my years overseas. I would make my WNBA salary in one month overseas – my whole salary”

McCoughtry said it’s possible for WNBA players to earn more if they receive the level of promotion their male counterparts do.

“If you promote the women just like the men, people will watch,” McCoughtry said. “Once we get the brand partnerships behind us and promoting us and people know who we are, they’ll come to watch. It will grow.”

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Brittney Griner trade news live: WNBA star arrives at San Antonio army hospital in US after being released by Russia in exchange for Viktor Bout

Brittney Griner back on US soil after spending 294 days in Russian prison

Brittney Griner has landed back on US soil for the first time in 10 months after she was released from Russian custody in a prisoner swap with “Merchant of Death” Viktor Bout.

The WNBA star arrived at the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio early on Friday morning, where she will be examined and receive any necessary medical treatment.

Footage showed Ms Griner and Bout being exchanged on the tarmac of a runway in the UAE on Thursday, following weeks of negotiations between Washington and Moscow.

The deal failed to include US Marine Paul Whelan who has been detained in Russia for the last four years. Mr Whelan told CNN he was “greatly disappointed” to learn he was not part of the prisoner swap, saying: “I don’t understand why I’m still sitting here.”

President Joe Biden insisted on Thursday that “we’ve not forgotten about Paul Whelan” and vowed to “never give up” securing his release, as the swap divided opinion across the country. The White House was also forced to deny claims made by Saudi Arabia and the UAE that MBS negotiated the deal.

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White House press secretary says Brittney Griner reunited with wife, appears to be in good health

Former WNBA star Brittney Griner has been reunited with her wife, Cherelle, according to White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.

Griner returned to the US on Friday after she was released from Russian custody thanks to a prisoner swap negotiated by US officials. International arms dealer Viktor Bout was released from US custody in the trade.

Ms Jean-Pierre said Griner was in “very good spirits” upon her return, and appeared “to be in good health.”

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 19:52

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Brittney Griner cut her hair while locked up in Russia because her locks were freezing

Former WNBA star Brittney Griner, who was released from Russian custody this week thanks to a prisoner swap deal the US made the Russia, reportedly cut her hair short while imprisoned because it was freezing on her head.

Maria Blagovolina, one of Griner’s attorneys, told ESPN that Griner cut her hair approximately two weeks ago after it began freezing due to the cold Russian winter.

“It’s very cold in there and every time she washed her hair she got cold and would get a chill,” Ms Blagovolina said. “She should have waited until New Year’s Day.”

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 19:31

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Russians did not negotiate ‘in good faith’ for Paul Whelan, White House press secretary says

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on Friday that Russia was not willing to engage in “good faith” negotiations to free Paul Whelan, an American man who has been imprisoned in the country since 2018. US officials attempted to include Mr Whelan in a prisoner swap deal they made to free former WNBA star Brittney Griner, but a deal could not be reached.

“In the past week or two, we saw that the Russians were willing to release Brittney Griner for Mr Bout. That’s what was presented to us. They were not willing to negotiate in good faith for Paul Whelan.”

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 19:03

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Russia offered up Paul Whelan as part of Brittney Griner trade, but asked for spy serving life sentence for murder

US officials speaking with CNN told the outlet that Russia did offer Paul Whelan as part of the prisoner swap deal that freed former WNBA star Brittney Griner, but only if a Russian spy serving a life sentence in Germany for murder was released along with the “Merchant of Death” Viktor Bout.

The US inquired with Germany about potentially releasing Vadim Krasikov, the Russian spy who was convicted for murder. The US was unable to negotiate for the Russian’s release. However, according to officials, the US did offer up other imprisoned Russians in an effort to free Mr Whelan, but those offers were rejected by Russia.

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 18:46

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Tucker Carlson makes baseless claim that Biden chose to rescue Griner and not Paul Whelan due to identity politics

During a broadcast on Fox News, host Tucker Carlson claimed, without evidence, that NBC News scrubbed a report it released that initially said Russia had given the US the option to release either Brittney Griner or Paul Whelan. He claims the network did this at the behest of the Biden administration, again without a shred of evidence.

“Why did they make that choice? You should know that Whalen is a Trump voter and he made the mistake of saying so on social media, and he’s paying the price for that now,” Carlson said. “Brittany Griner is not. She has very different politics.”

According to Carlson, Griner was chosen because Mr Whelan is a Trump voter and Griner is Black, a woman, and a lesbian.

Russia — which has no incentive to protect Joe Biden’s image — has not issued any statement undermining the White House’s claim that Mr Whelan was never on the table for a possible prisoner swap.

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 17:57

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Steph Curry’s full Brittney Griner message during SI Sportsperson of the Year awards

NBA star Steph Curry won Sports Illustrated’s Sportsperson of the Year award during a ceremony on Thursday, and during his acceptance speech addressed the release of former WNBA star Brittney Griner.

Mr Curry was a major advocate for Griner while she was in prison.

“We are glad she’s home, we’re glad she’s reunited with her family,” Mr Curry said. “It’s a constant reminder for everybody continuing to use their platforms to speak on issues that are meaningful and can move the needle. Thank you to President Biden’s administration for being a part of that fight. But, it’s also a reminder that we all need to stay engaged in the fight to protect American citizens at home and abroad who are wrongfully detained, and we can continue to be engaged in that fight. BG, we love you. We thank you for your sacrifice and your continued perseverance and patience to get through this process, and hope you enjoy reuniting with your family. We are always with you, BG.”

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 17:25

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‘Merchant of Death’ Viktor Bout says the West wants Russia to crumble

Viktor Bout, a notorious arms dealer, was released this week in a prisoner exchange between the US and Russia for former WNBA star Brittney Griner. After his release he shared his views about his captors with Russian media, according to the Associated Press.

“The West believes that it has failed to finish us off when the Soviet Union began to collapse,” Bout said. “And our efforts to live independently, be an independent power is a shock to them.”

Russian state media hailed Bout’s return.

“Everyone will forget about Griner tomorrow,” Yevgeny Popov, a Russian state media host, wrote on Telegram on Thursday. “Bout’s life is only beginning.”

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 16:46

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Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters on Friday in the wake of Brittney Griner’s release that more prisoner swaps with the US may be possible in the future.

According to the Associated Press, Mr Putin said that “everything is possible” when asked if there may be more prisoner exchanges in the future.

“We aren’t refusing to continue this work in the future,” he said.

It’s unclear what that may mean in for Paul Whelan, an American who has been locked up in Russia since 2018. The White House pushed for his release alongside Griner’s, but reports indicate Russia was not willing to release Mr Whelan.

Joe Biden said he would “never give up” trying to secure Mr Whelan’s release.

Read more in the Independent Premium story below…

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 16:20

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Pentagon admits it has ‘concerns’ over release of ‘Merchant of Death’

An unnamed Pentagon official said there are some concerns within the defense agency regarding the release of Viktor Bout, the “Merchant of Death” arms dealer, back into the world.

Bout was freed by the US as part of a prisoner swap to secure the release of Brittney Griner.

“I think there is a concern that he would return to doing the same kind of work that he’s done in the past,” an unnamed Defense Department official told Politico.

Read more at The Independent below.

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 15:56

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Putin says future prisoners swaps possible

Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters on Friday in the wake of Brittney Griner’s release that more prisoner swaps with the US may be possible in the future.

According to the Associated Press, Mr Putin said that “everything is possible” when asked if there may be more prisoner exchanges in the future.

“We aren’t refusing to continue this work in the future,” he said.

It’s unclear what that may mean in for Paul Whelan, an American who has been locked up in Russia since 2018. The White House pushed for his release alongside Griner’s, but reports indicate Russia was not willing to release Mr Whelan.

Joe Biden said he would “never give up” trying to secure Mr Whelan’s release.

Graig Graziosi9 December 2022 15:32

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