Angel Reese wants Chicago Sky to do more in WNBA free agency

Few players are more fixated on the upcoming WNBA free-agency cycle than Angel Reese.

More than 100 players will enter free agency this winter as the tumult of a two-team expansion draft and a new collective bargaining agreement promises an offseason of leaguewide upheaval. Those players include 21 of this year’s 24 All-Star selections.

Reese is not one of the anticipated free agents. The Sky forward is five games away from finishing the second season of her rookie contract, a three-year agreement with a team option that all but guarantees to keep her in Chicago through 2027.

But that doesn’t mean she’s content to spend the upcoming offseason on the sideline. In the final dregs of a second consecutive losing season, with a 9-30 record entering Wednesday night’s home game against the Connecticut Sun, the Sky’s leading scorer is making her voice heard within the front office.

“I’m not settling for the same s−−− we did this year,” Reese told the Tribune. “We have to get good players. We have to get great players. That’s a non-negotiable for me.

“I’m willing and wanting to play with the best. And however I can help to get the best here, that’s what I’m going to do this offseason. So it’s going to be very, very important this offseason to make sure we attract the best of the best because we can’t settle for what we have this year.”

Throughout her tenure in Chicago, Reese has been consistent about her buy-in with the Sky.

When the team missed the playoffs in 2024 and fired first-year coach Teresa Weatherspoon — with whom Reese maintains a strong relationship — she voiced frustration yet maintained her commitment to building a long-term future in Chicago. She bought a house in Lemont last offseason and helped renovate custom courts at Oakwood Beach. And when faced with criticism of the Sky’s training facilities and overall investment, Reese often shrugged off questions with the same response: “I just want to hoop.”

But at the end of this season, she’s beginning to take a more pragmatic — and conditional — stance toward her future with the Sky.

Sky forward Angel Reese drives down the court against the Mystics on June 17, 2025, at Wintrust Arena. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)

“I am very vocal about what we need and what I want,” Reese said. “I’d like to be here for my career, but if things don’t pan out, obviously I might have to move in a different direction and do what’s best for me. But while I am here, I’m going to try to stay open-minded about what I have here and maximize that as much as I can.”

Reese has no trouble coming up with ideas for how to improve the Sky — and sharing them with anyone in authority, from general manager Jeff Pagliocca to owner Michael Alter.

She wants expanded office spaces and training facilities to give the organization a more comparable work environment to competitors around the league. She wants a more dynamic style of play on the court. She wants the Sky to establish a more cohesive identity regardless of personnel. And she wants coach Tyler Marsh to coach players harder.

But more than anything else this winter, Reese wants the Sky to get the roster right in free agency.

The front office never has been timid since Pagliocca took over as GM. He traded Kahleah Copper to get the No. 3 draft pick in 2024, then sent out the No. 3 pick in 2025 to acquire Ariel Atkins. The phones at Sachs Recreation Center are some of the most active in the league. Still, that activity has yet to be rewarded with on-court success.

Pagliocca had a vision for the 2025 team — a group that could sling 3-pointers and play up-tempo offense while running through Reese and Kamilla Cardoso on both ends of the court. But the concept crumbled almost immediately before being thrown completely off track with Courtney Vandersloot’s season-ending injury.

Sure, the Sky are young. And sure, they suffered several major blows due to injury throughout the year. But Reese pointed to the first-year Golden State Valkyries — who are sixth in the league standings despite building their roster primarily through the expansion draft — as a comparison point for how the Sky have underperformed this season.

“Watching Golden State — no offense, but I don’t think they’re more talented than us on paper,” Reese said. “But they play hard as hell. So starting at the top, we’ve got to find an identity of what we’re going to be next year and then roll with the punches of what we can get.”

Sky forward Angel Reese stands on the court before a game against the Dream on July 16, 2025, at Wintrust Arena. (Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune)
Sky forward Angel Reese stands on the court before a game against the Dream on July 16, 2025, at Wintrust Arena. (Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune)

The Sky front office has targeted Atkins, Vandersloot and Rachel Banham as three veterans to potentially bring back through free agency. Hailey Van Lith and Maddy Westbeld remain under contract alongside Reese and Cardoso, although the rookies could be dealt in trades. The 2026 roster also will include the addition of 2025 draft pick Ajša Sivka — who sat out this season to play in the EuroLeague — and a lottery pick conveyed by the Connecticut Sun.

That accounts for potentially nine roster spots, yet Reese anticipates a substantial overhaul this winter. She believes there are only two guarantees on the 2026 Sky roster: herself and Cardoso. Between the expansion draft and free agency, the rest of the group is unknown.

Reese identified free-agency needs across the roster — including a backup post and a fleet of shooting guards who can get downhill and shoot 3-pointers more efficiently than this year’s backcourt — but her main concern surrounds the point guard position.

Vandersloot’s absence this season exposed weaknesses across the Sky roster. The team lacks players who can attack the rim and split the seams of the defense while moving downhill. Guards such as Banham, Van Lith and Kia Nurse have been out of position and out of their depth during emergency stints at point guard. As a result, the Sky have relied heavily on Reese to handle the ball as a point forward.

While praising Vandersloot’s abilities and leadership, Reese balked at the prospect of building the roster around a point guard attempting to return from an ACL tear at age 36. And she doesn’t believe backup options such as Banham or Van Lith are better prepared to carry the mantle on a playoff team.

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