Taurasi played her final game for the Mercury on Sept. 25 — Phoenix lost to the Minnesota Lynx 101-88 in the first round of ...
Diana Taurasi, often known for her fiery and relentless behavior on the court, isn’t a fan of showing her deeper emotions off ...
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UConn women’s basketball legend Diana Taurasi reflected on a historic WNBA career after announcing her retirement from the ...
Retirement hits athletes in different ways. Some need to mourn. Taurasi is experiencing this in her own unique way.
Taurasi made the all-WNBA first team 10 times and was on the first or second team a record 14 times. She’s also an 11-time ...
In her first press conference since she announced her retirement, Diana Taurasi is not sure what’s next, but hopes to support ...
We have Diana, and they don’t,” the quote went. But who ever had Diana? It is the magic thing about her, the way she gave herself over to no one.
After 25 years of dominating basketball courts, from college to the WNBA to the Olympics, Diana Taurasi is finally calling it a career. The former UConn star announced her retirement on Tuesday.
Panini has released an Instant Card featuring WNBA great Diana Taurasi to commemorate her retirement as the league’s all-time leading scorer. The Phoenix Mercury star and three-time WNBA ...
It ain't Sheryl Swoopes or Maya Moore... no, the WNBA's G.O.A.T. is Diana Taurasi-- at least, that's according to former UConn guard Jen Rizzotti. The Huskies hooper -- who's currently the ...
Diana Taurasi retired on Feb. 25, ending one of the best careers the WNBA has ever seen. The three-time WNBA champion called it a career after 20 seasons with the Phoenix Mercury. Now that she is ...
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