Keep calm and hoop on
From The GIST (hi@thegistsports.com)
It’s Friday!
Consider the WNBA Finals action a sign to shoot your shot this weekend. Buckets, loading, as we scroll through today’s news.
— NY Liberty superstar Sabrina Ionescu, cheekily acknowledging her All-WNBA First Team snub Second Team honors after nailing a heroic Game 3–winning logo three-pointer on Wednesday. Jaw? On the floor.
WNBA Finals
🏀 Ice cold
The GIST: The No. 1 NY Liberty are one win away from their first-ever championship following Wednesday's stunning comeback 80–77 Game 3 win over the No. 2 Minnesota Lynx. This Finals series has been downright unpredictable, but here’s what we do know ahead of tonight’s 8 p.m. ET Game 4 and a potential Game 5 on Sunday.
Liberty superstar Sabrina Ionescu inked her name in WNBA history: Much like the Lynx in Game 1, the Libs were down bad in Game 3, trailing by as many as 15 points — but that all changed in the fourth quarter.
- Breanna Stewart went on a tear, finishing with 30 points, 11 rebounds, and four blocks and would have undoubtedly been the game MVP…had Ionescu not made that shot.
- Guarded by Minnesota’s ultra-tough Kayla McBride, sharpshooter Ionescu had only made one three-pointer before the game’s final minute, where she sunk not one, but two crucial threes, including the incredible game-winner. Playing like she had something to prove.
But Napheesa Collier and the Lynx aren’t done yet: Game 3 was played in front of 19,521 rowdy fans, the largest-ever Lynx crowd — and they’ll be back out there for Game 4.
- Though league MVP runner-up Collier is facing her toughest matchup of the playoffs yet in Stewie, she was only one rebound shy of a double-double on Wednesday, and has already broken the legendary Diana Taurasi’s record for most points in a single postseason.
- TL;DR — Collier is on fire, and Minnesota had the edge until they ran out of gas in Game 3. This darn good team may not be super, but they should never be underestimated.
Take Your Pick
This is it…maybe? It hasn’t been easy predicting the WNBA Finals, but we’re giving you another chance to choose who you think will win tonight’s Game 4. Keep calm and hoop on.
MLB playoffs
⚾ Down, but not out
The GIST: From the soaring viewership numbers to the down-to-the-wire on-field action, these MLB playoffs have already been a true home run. One swing of the bat can change the tide in these best-of-seven Championship Series — let’s step up to the plate with the latest.
Cleveland Guardians walk-off NY Yankees to avoid a three-game deficit: “It’s not over ’til it’s over,” the Guards, probably. Down to their final out, Cleveland’s Jhonkensy “Big Christmas” Noel blasted a two-run, game-tying home run to send things to extra innings.
- That’s where David Fry delivered a clutch walk-off two-run shot, giving the Guardians the 7–5 win and bringing the series to 2-1 in favor of the Yanks heading into tonight’s 8:08 p.m. ET Game 4 from Cleveland. These boys might’ve just found their wings.
High-powered LA Dodgers one win away from World Series: LA superstars Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts blasted one home run apiece in last night’s dominant 10–2 Game 4 win over the NY Mets, putting the Blue Crew just one victory away from a 22nd franchise trip to the Fall Classic.
- The Mets have home-field advantage for a must-win Game 5 tonight at 5:08 p.m. ET, but they’ve had no answers for this explosive Dodgers offense and LA is sending lights out hurler Jack Flaherty to the mound.
- It’s going to take a whole lot of luck — and probably some Grimace Magic — to dig out of this hole.
Together With The GIST
🤯 Did you know?
Did you know that the most distinctive shift in sports in the last 50 years has been the rapid rise in the importance, influence, and value of female fans?*
Did you know that 80% of all consumer spending is controlled by women?**
Did you know that The GIST reaches one million newsletter subscribers, 85% of whom identify as women or nonbinary?
Did you know that you could grow brand love and affinity by aligning with a women-founded business that’s challenging the male-dominated sports industry?
If this sounds intriguing to you or your company, let’s talk.
* Data from Nielsen** Data from CNBCF1
🏎️ Giddy Buckle up, partner
The GIST: With four weeks passed since McLaren’s Lando Norris won the Singapore Grand Prix and only six races left in the season, F1 lands in the Lone Star State for the United States Grand Prix from Austin’s Circuit of the Americas (COTA) this weekend. Here’s everything you need to know ahead of the speedy action.
The standings: Unlike last season’s runaway by Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, this year is a completely different story. Verstappen won six of the first 10 races in 2024 and is first in the Driver Standings, but the Dutchman hasn’t found the top of the podium since.
- The aforementioned Norris won the first three races of his career this season, propelling the British driver to second place in the Driver Standings, only 52 points behind and well within striking distance of Mad Max.
- McLaren’s recent success also powered them to the top of the Constructor Standings, ahead of reigning two-time champs Red Bull. Palms are sweaty, indeed.
The track: Switching, ahem, gears to the course, COTA's 5.5km track debuted in 2012 — then the first US Grand Prix since 2007 — and has been a mainstay on the F1 calendar ever since.
- But before Sunday’s 3 p.m. ET, 56-lap race gets underway, the drivers will embark on a shorter, more dynamic Sprint race tomorrow at 2 p.m. ET, with points awarded to the top eight finishers.
Zooming out: Austin’s one of a handful of races revved up for North American fans. Thanks to the success of the Drive to Survive Netflix series, F1’s American fan base grew exponentially, prompting the addition of the Miami Grand Prix in 2022 and the Las Vegas Grand Prix in 2023. The second is slated for later this month, where drivers will race the famous Las Vegas Strip. Start those engines.
🇨🇦🏈 CFL: Ottawa Redblacks vs. Toronto Argonauts — Tomorrow at 3 p.m. ET — TSN
- With the postseason looming later this month, the Argos can clinch home-field advantage with a win over their provincial rival — that said, Redblacks quarterback (QB) Dru Brown is back under center, so it certainly won’t be easy.
⚽ MLS: NYC FC vs. CF Montréal — Tomorrow at 6 p.m. ET — TSN
- It’s the final weekend of MLS action, and the stakes have never been higher. Montréal can clinch a postseason berth with a win, otherwise L'Impact will have to play the dreaded waiting game. May the odds be ever in their favor on Decision Day.
🏒 NHL: NY Rangers vs. Toronto Maple Leafs — Tomorrow at 7 p.m. ET — CBC
- Buckle up because the best game you can name is bringing you a spicy, icy Original Six matchup for Hockey Night in Canada, with the Leafs looking to solve the puzzle that is NY’s star goalie Igor Shesterkin.
🏈 NFL: Kansas City Chiefs vs. San Francisco 49ers — Sunday at 4:25 p.m. ET — DAZN
- The Super Bowl rematch we’ve been waiting for won’t see reigning Offensive Player of the Year, injured SF running back Christian McCaffrey, take the field, but it will feature standout KC QB Patrick Mahomes. Super, indeed.
Here’s what has The GIST team currently hyped:
📰 What to read
This Wall Street Journal Magazine article on the WNBA’s record-breaking year, featuring Chicago Sky rookie Angel Reese and league MVP, Las Vegas Ace A’ja Wilson. Smize, cover girls.
🇨🇦⚽ Where there are updates
With the CanWNT, who added former player Diana Matheson to their interim coaching staff, the latest change in the wake of the drone scandal that rocked the Paris Olympics and resulted in head coach Bev Priestman’s one-year suspension.
📺 What to watch
Faceoff: Inside the NHL, which offers an unfiltered look at the NHL stars chasing the ultimate goal: the Stanley Cup. It’s Drive to Survive, but for hockey fans and all six episodes are streaming on Prime.
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