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Teresa Weatherspoon named coach of WNBA's Sky

Teresa Weatherspoon has been named the new head coach of the Chicago Sky, the team announced Thursday.

Weatherspoon, one of the WNBA's most iconic players since its launch in 1997, called her new role "a dream come true."

"The things that we are about to do as a team, a business and in the community will be rooted in excitement, excellence and hard work," she said as part of a statement.

Weatherspoon -- who was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019 -- returns to the league after a lengthy stint working with the New Orleans Pelicans, first as a player development coach in 2019 and then as an assistant since 2020. During her playing career, Weatherspoon was a two-time Defensive Player of the Year, a five-time All-Star and a four-time WNBA second-team honoree, mostly playing for the New York Liberty before finishing with the Los Angeles Sparks.

Weatherspoon also won the 1988 NCAA championship with Louisiana Tech, where she previously served as head coach from 2009 to 2014, and played for the U.S. Olympic team in 1988 and 1992, winning gold and bronze medals in those competitions, respectively.

The Sky were in the search for a new head coach after James Wade left midseason for an NBA assistant-coaching job. The 2021 WNBA champs have appeared in the postseason for five straight years, although they finished the 2023 regular season a meager 18-22 before falling to the Las Vegas Aces in the first round of the playoffs.

The organization announced at the end of the season that interim Emre Vatansever would not return as head coach.

"A WNBA legend and five-time All-Star, Olympian, and college national champion, Teresa brings a wealth of NBA and college coaching experience to the Sky," Sky co-owner Nadia Rawlinson said. "Her standard of excellence and history of winning at all levels, coaching expertise, knowledge of the game, passion, energy, and skill in player development make Teresa the perfect choice to build on our championship culture and usher in an exciting new era."

Despite a tumultuous 2023 that saw the departures of Candace Parker, Courtney Vandersloot, Allie Quigley, Azura Stevens and Emma Meesseman in the offseason, things are looking up for Chicago. It brought in Dwyane Wade as a minority owner in July, re-signed 2021 Finals MVP Kahleah Copper to a two-year extension before she hit free agency and now is bringing in a big-name head coach.

Weatherspoon was a highly regarded voice in New Orleans, garnering immense praise and respect from franchise player Zion Williamson. She was also in the running for the Phoenix Mercury's head-coaching job in 2022 before she reportedly withdrew her name from consideration after the Pelicans successfully fought to keep her.

With Weatherspoon's hire, the league now has six head-coaching positions occupied by former players. The Mercury have the only other vacant head-coaching job, with former player Nikki Blue serving as interim head coach this season.