A new coach making his debut in the WNBA. A brand-new lineup after an offseason roster overhaul. And an ownership group whose future investment in the franchise remains up in the air.
But on Sunday, in the Sun’s 2025 season opener at Mohegan Sun Arena, the team laid down the first brick in turning its summer around.
Former UConn women’s basketball stars Tina Charles and Bria Hartley were unstoppable. Charles was an unshakable force down low, while Hartley put on a scoring clinic off the bench.
There were sharp, smooth passes, clutch baskets, aggressive defense, and, of course, drama. Sun fan favorite, and one of just two returners from last season’s roster, Marina Mabrey got her first technical of the year less than seven minutes in, while the game came down to the wire hours later.
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Despite the final score, the Sun's new-look team chemistry was its biggest highlight in its 90-85 loss to Washington, proving the team may have more to it than what meets the eye from the outside.
"It’s not (how) we want to start our season, but sometimes, a losing game, I don’t want to say it’s a good foundation, but it’s something we can use to change little things," new Sun head coach Rachid Meziane said.
Heading into Sunday’s game, winning was priority No. 1, but new Sun head coach Meziane said one of his main focuses was to see how his team would gel under the lights against a real opponent.
Connecticut (0-1) opened the game with four assists on four made field goals. Mabrey and Charles yelled out directions, and the others followed suit, moving quickly to help create open looks for each other. Everyone got involved, from the newbies to the veterans. When someone got trapped or needed help shaking off a defender, a teammate was there to help.
When Washington’s Shakria Austin shoved Sun rookie Kariata Diaby, Mabrey rushed to defend her new teammate by shoving Austin back. Both shoves resulted in early technical fouls. Austin was later ejected from the game minutes into the second half after appearing to say something on the bench.
Hartley, playing in her first WNBA game since 2022, picked up the pace off the bench while Diaby held her own against Washington’s bigs. By halftime, six out of nine Sun players had scored with three in double figures.
"I think that because everybody's so new, I think we're hungry, and so I think that's something that you can't really teach," former Husky Olivia Nelson-Ododa (18 points, eight rebounds) said. "And so, just knowing that people are like-minded with the same goal, we really just want to win. We want to get out there and play as hard as we can and compete. I think that's a great place to start, especially with such a new team and new staff."
When Washington (2-0) made a 14-6 run in the second quarter, cutting Connecticut’s once 15-point lead to two before tying the game, the Sun remained calm and in control. Charles stepped up in the second half and dominated. She was the first Sun player with 20-plus points. Halfway through the fourth quarter, Charles grabbed down her 10th rebound to record her first double-double of the year. The former Husky great finished with a team-high 23 points and 10 rebounds.
But the Mystics made a bigger move midway through the fourth and forced three lead changes within a minute to lead by five with 3:36 left. It was the first time all game that Connecticut had given up the lead.
"We've shown ourselves that we can do it, but it's just doing it for 40 minutes," Charles said. "It's hard. (We) just need to handle hard well and be able to fight through fatigue when you get tired."
Washington's leading scorer, Brittney Sykes (27 points), fouled out with 46 seconds remaining with the Sun down three. That sent Sun guard Jacy Sheldon to the line. The former Ohio State star made both free throws to get Connecticut within one.
But the comeback fell short. After Sonia Citron got the Mystics back up to a three-point lead with a driving layup, Mabrey's 3-point attempt to tie the game with four seconds left bounced off.
While it's not the end result the team wanted, Meziane said he remains "optimistic" about his team heading into the rest of the season. Led by Charles and Nelson-Ododa, Mabrey (11 points), Sheldon (11 points) and Hartley (11 points), also all finished in double figures. New point guard Lindsay Allen led with a game-high eight assists. The Sun played 9 of its 10 available players. Rookies Aneesah Morrow (right knee) and Sanyia Rivers (personal) sat out unavailable.
"We already know that it will take a lot of hard work, so we just have to be patient," Meziane said. "You know, with W it's a long (season), so we have time. Cannot just say, because we lost today, that we have to change everything. We have to change some things, and how we practice and how we have to be more consistent. It's still a work in progress."