WNBA coaching changes for 2025: Chicago hires Marsh, Fever nab White

ByESPN ESPN logo
Sunday, November 3, 2024 4:21PM

A day after theIndiana Fever named Stephanie White their head coach, a second opening was filled when theChicago Sky hired Las Vegas Aces assistant Tyler Marsh.

Five WNBA head-coaching jobs remain open.

The coaching carousel started five days after the WNBA regular season ended, when theLos Angeles Sparksparted ways with coach Curt Miller on Sept. 24. Five more coaches were fired over the next 33 days. On Monday, theConnecticut Sunannounced they were parting ways with White -- leaving seven head-coaching positions open.

That means 58.3% of the teams in the league will start next season with a different head coach from the one they ended the 2024 season with. That is the highest percentage of teams making offseason head-coaching changes in league history, according to ESPN Research.

And that doesn't include the Golden State Valkyries, the WNBA's first expansion team since 2008. On Oct. 10, the Valkyriesnamed Natalie Nakasethe team'sfirst coach.

We're tracking all the coaching and general manager changes this offseason.

Last updated:Nov. 2, 2024

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Coaching changes | General manager changes

WNBA head-coaching changes

Chicago Sky

Former coach: Teresa Weatherspoon (fired Sept. 26)

New coach: Tyler Marsh (hired Nov. 2)

Marsh joined the Aces in March 2022 and was an assistant on Becky Hammon's staff for Las Vegas' back-to-back WNBA championships in 2022 and 2023. The Aces went 77-29 over his three seasons and were 19-6 in the playoffs. Before joining the Aces, he won an NBA championship with the 2018-19 Toronto Raptors as assistant video coordinator and player development coach, and spent two seasons as a player development coach with the Indiana Pacers.

MORE: Are Marsh's skill development and the Sky's potential a perfect match?

Weatherspoon was 13-27 in one season with the Sky, who were in playoff contention for much of the second half of the season despite losing rookieAngel Reeseto a wrist injury for the final six games of the regular season.

MORE: What's next for Sky, Reese after Weatherspoon fired?

Indiana Fever

Former coach: Christie Sides (fired Oct. 27)

New coach: Stephanie White (hired Nov. 1)

Four days after she parted ways with the Sun, White returns to Indiana, where she was head coach for two seasons in 2015 and 2016 and has a long tenure in the organization: four years as a player in the early 2000s and four more as an assistant (including the 2012 championship season) prior to her head-coaching stint.

MORE: Why White is a good fit for Fever, Clark

Sides was 33-47 in two seasons with the Fever, including a 20-20 record this season, when she led Indiana to its first playoff berth since 2016. The Fever were swept 2-0 in the first round.

MORE: What are Fever looking for in Sides' successor?

Connecticut Sun

Former coach: Stephanie White (parted ways Oct. 28)

White was 62-32 in two seasons with the Sun, including a 7-7 postseason record. Connecticut reached the semifinals both seasons, including in 2023 when she was WNBA Coach of the Year.

Washington Mystics

Former coach: Eric Thibault (fired Oct. 23)

Thibault, who was let go along with his father, Mystics general manager Mike Thibault, was 33-47 in two seasons, including a 14-26 mark this season, when Washington finished one game behind the eighth and final playoff team in the standings.

MORE: What the Thibaults' exit means for the Mystics, WNBA coaching vacancies

Dallas Wings

Former coach: Latricia Trammell (fired Oct. 18)

Trammell was 31-49 in two seasons with the Wings, who went 9-31 and missed the playoffs this season after going 22-18 and reaching the semifinals in 2023.

Atlanta Dream

Former coach: Tanisha Wright (fired Oct. 2)

Wright was 48-68 in three seasons, leading the Dream to the playoffs in 2023 and 2024.The Dream, whose last winning record came in 2018, were swept both times.

MORE: What Wright's firing means for Dream, WNBA coaching landscape

Los Angeles Sparks

Former coach: Curt Miller (fired Sept. 24)

Miller was 25-55 in two seasons with the Sparks, who were a league-worst 8-32 this summer, enduring a series of injures, including to rookieCameron Brink.

MORE: Why the Sparks, Miller parted ways, and what's next

WNBA general manager changes

Las Vegas Aces

Former GM: Natalie Williams (Oct. 26)

Williams' contract wasn't renewed as part of a restructuring of the Aces' front office (the team's announcement didn't elaborate on what other changes that entails). Williams -- who was hired in 2022 and played for the franchise when it was the Utah Starzz -- served as GM during Las Vegas' back-to-back championship seasons. -- Alexa Philippou

Washington Mystics

Former GM: Mike Thibault (Oct. 23)

The Mystics parted ways with Mike (general manager) and Eric Thibault (coach) on the same day. Mike Thibault had been with the franchise for over a decade, assuming the head-coaching job in 2013 before handing the torch to Eric and focusing solely on GM duties after the 2022 season. -- Philippou

Dallas Wings

Former GM: Greg Bibb (Oct. 18)

With Latricia Trammell's firing earlier this month, the Wings also announced that they'd be hiring a general manager to oversee day-to-day basketball operations, including the hiring of the team's new head coach. Greg Bibb previously served as GM, in addition to president and CEO of the franchise. -- Philippou

Indiana Fever

Former GM: Lin Dunn (Oct. 4)

New GM: Amber Cox (Oct. 4)

Cox comes to the Indiana as its new chief operating officer and GM after previously serving as COO of the Dallas Wings. Her other WNBA experience includes stints as an executive with the Connecticut Sun and Phoenix Mercury. Dunn, the longtime Fever fixture, moves on from GM to a senior advisor role. -- Philippou

Golden State Valkyries

New GM: Ohemaa Nyanin (May 6)

Nyanin, a former assistant general manager with the New York Liberty, was named the first general manager of the expansion Golden State Valkyries. Nyanin has extensive experience with FIBA and USA Basketball. The team also hired a vice president of basketball operations, Vanja Cernivec, who will report to Nyanin. -- Philippou

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