Sue Bird sits courtside for Storm-Mercury in what could be the final home game of Diana Taurasi's illustrious career.
By Callie Holtermann Bird, 41, the Seattle Storm guard ... the season of the girls’ basketball team at Christ the King High School in Queens 16 years ago returned for an update.
Around these parts? I got Ken Griffey Jr., I got Ichiro, I got (bracing for impact) Russell Wilson — and I got Sue Bird. Apologies to Edgar Martinez and Gary Payton, but she earned it.
The WNBA playoffs are right around the corner, and Sue Bird says there are three teams she wouldn’t want to see during that stretch, including Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever. Our weekly ...
Sue Bird is being honored for her contributions to the Seattle Storm over the years. On Monday, the city of Seattle and Seattle mayor Bruce Harrell permanently renamed a stretch of Second Ave.
If Sue Bird were still playing in the WNBA, there’s one team and, more specifically, one player she would not want to see in the playoffs: the Indiana Fever and first overall pick Caitlin Clark.
Sue Bird's legacy in the Seattle Storm organization continues on as the team dedicated a street outside of their Climate Pledge Arena to her on Monday. The section of Second Ave North between ...
Beneath overcast skies at a private ceremony Monday morning, Mayor Bruce Harrell announced the city changed a section of 2nd Avenue North, on the southeast end of the arena, to Sue Bird Court.
Bird joins longtime Seattle Mariners star Edgar Martinez and Lenny Wilkens, a player, coach and executive for the Seattle SuperSonics, as Seattle athletes to be honored with street names.
But recent performances certainly add a layer of optimism to this year's side. According to WNBA legend Sue Bird, they could also serve as a blueprint of how Indiana can outgun its opposition one ...