On Thursday basketball legend Diana Taurasi held her official retirement press conference, a few weeks after making the announcement in TIME magazine. While touching on the various aspects of the ...
Retirement hits athletes in different ways. Some need to mourn. Taurasi is experiencing this in her own unique way.
Taurasi played her final game for the Mercury on Sept. 25 — Phoenix lost to the Minnesota Lynx 101-88 in the first round of the playoffs. She didn't comment on whether she would return at the time and ...
For decades, Taurasi never hesitated to poke, prod or expose the WNBA for its treatment of athletes. For the paltry salaries ...
Taurasi made the all-WNBA first team 10 times and was on the first or second team a record 14 times. She’s also an 11-time ...
In her first press conference since she announced her retirement, Diana Taurasi is not sure what’s next, but hopes to support ...
Before she became a record-setting pro basketball player, Diana Taurasi was a young athlete in Chino with big dreams. Her father, Mario Taurasi, was a professional soccer player in Italy.
Diana Taurasi dribbled up the court at Arroyo High School. It was 1999, the summer before her senior year, and the nationally ranked Don Lugo High star was feeling it. She looked over to the ...
Diana Taurasi has officially announced that she will be retiring from the WNBA after 20 legendary years. Having spent her entire career with the Phoenix Mercury, Taurasi leaves the sport as one of ...
STORRS — Diana Taurasi built her reputation as the biggest villain in women’s basketball over decades of smart remarks and vicious physicality on the court, accumulating a record 107 technical ...
Drey Jameson's long road back The Arizona Republic's preseason Top 30 high school softball players for 2025 What Phoenix Mercury great Diana Taurasi said about retirement, Caitlin Clark on 'The ...
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