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    Sunday, May 19, 2024

    Sun now have veterans Banham, Jefferson, Mitchell in an ode to the draft class of 2016

    University of Minnesota guard Rachel Banham, right, poses with WNBA president Lisa Borders after being selected No. 4 overall by the Connecticut Sun during the 2016 WNBA Draft at Mohegan Sun Arena. Banham, now a veteran of the league, recently returned to the Sun as a free agent, citing the memories she made here the first time around. Connecticut meets the New York Liberty in a preseason game Thursday at Mohegan Sun. (Day File Photo)
    UConn's Moriah Jefferson, right, fist-bumps WNBA president Lisa Borders after being selected second overall by the San Antonio Stars during the 2016 WNBA Draft at Mohegan Sun Arena. Jefferson recently returned to Connecticut as a member of the Sun. (Day File Photo)
    Minnesota Lynx guard Tiffany Mitchell, center, works toward the basket while defended by Connecticut Sun forward DeWanna Bonner, left, and guard Tiffany Hayes during a first-round playoff series in 2023. Acquired by trade, Mitchell joins the Sun this season. (Abbie Parr/AP Photo)
    Indiana Fever guard Danielle Robinson, right, drives on Minnesota Lynx guard Rachel Banham during a WNBA game in Indianapolis during the 2022 season. (Michael Conroy/AP Photo)
    Moriah Jefferson, then with the Phoenix Mercury, passes during a game against the Indiana Fever on Aug. 1, 2023, in Indianapolis. (Darron Cummings/AP Photo)

    Mohegan — The 2016 WNBA Draft was held at Mohegan Sun Arena and Rachel Banham went fourth overall to the Connecticut Sun, who make their home in the arena.

    The Sun, in fact, had three of the first six picks, choosing UConn’s Morgan Tuck third, Minnesota’s Banham fourth and George Washington’s Jonquel Jones sixth, getting two of those selections via trade.

    Banham played four seasons for Connecticut, starting five games in 2018, before being traded back home to the Minnesota Lynx. It was prior to this season, with Banham a free agent, she remembered the good memories she had with the Sun ... and the New England clam chowder.

    “It’s like a second home, for sure,” Banham said this week, back at Mohegan Sun, having signed a two-year contract with the Sun on Feb. 1. “That’s why I felt so good about coming back here because I felt comfortable, I felt familiar with it.

    “I knew the people. I knew the system. I knew the organization was really, really good, so it was, like, an easy transition.”

    The Sun, who have a veteran group of core players, were 27-13 a year ago finishing the season in the semifinals of the WNBA Playoffs against the New York Liberty. Connecticut plays its only preseason game at 7 p.m. Thursday against New York at Mohegan Sun Arena.

    In the offseason, the Sun brought in a few more veterans to complement the core group of Alyssa Thomas, DeWanna Bonner and Brionna Jones, who have 11 All-Star honors among them.

    Connecticut, in fact, recreated that 2016 draft class, somewhat, trading for Moriah Jefferson and Tiffany Mitchell, in addition to signing Banham.

    Jefferson, a UConn grad, was the second pick in 2016 after fellow UConn alum Breanna Stewart. Jefferson was drafted by Atlanta, but arrived in Connecticut after spending time in Phoenix. Mitchell, meanwhile, out of South Carolina, was selected ninth by the Indiana Fever, coming to the Sun by way of Minnesota where she was teammates with Banham.

    To recap: Stewart and Jonquel Jones now play for the Liberty, with Jefferson, Banham, Mitchell and Tuck — now Connecticut’s director of franchise development/assistant general manager — with the Sun organization, making Thursday’s game a bit of a reunion for the Class of 2016.

    The Sun were pleased to add more of a veteran presence in camp after losing Tiffany Hayes to retirement and Bec Allen, who was traded to Phoenix.

    “I think what happens when you become a veteran in this league is you understand,” Sun head coach Stephanie White said. “You try to fine-tune the things you really do well. You understand the bigger picture and how important the intangibles are just as much as the things that show up on the stat sheet.

    “Having players who are experienced, who understand that they don’t have to play outside of themselves ... playing with a core group they can complement.”

    Mitchell said that going somewhere new gives her anxiety. She has played for White previously, however, with White serving as head coach of the Fever when Mitchell was drafted, and for Sun general manager Darius Taylor, formerly an assistant coach at South Carolina.

    Banham was a prolific scorer in college at Minnesota, leaving as the Big Ten’s all-time leading scorer with 3,093 points, while Mitchell was the two-time SEC Player of the Year at South Carolina. Jefferson won four national championships at UConn along side Stewart and Tuck.

    All three were first team All-Americans. And all three continue working to elevate their play, what White calls “the standard” for a hard-working Sun roster. Banham coached at Minnesota during the offseason, leaving her with an insight that gives White confidence.

    “This team is completely different from other personnel that I’ve been with on other teams,” Mitchell said. “So there’s All-Stars on this team, with Steph and how she coaches, you’re just constantly figuring out more things to your game, adding things to your game and just building on that.”

    “I was pretty open-minded to exploring other options (when it came to signing),” Banham said. “I feel like I’ve gotten so much better over the last few years and I found myself and I’m super confident and playing with these women has been really fun. They believe in me and Steph believes in me and lets me just rock out and take shots and do my thing. However I can help ...”

    The Sun are still paring their roster down to the 12-player limit for WNBA teams, although Connecticut will likely need to get to 11 due to the salary cap. Prior to Thursday’s preseason game they’re still at 15, having traded for Washington’s Queen Egbo on Tuesday to accent their frontcourt.

    Connecticut opens the regular season at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday against the Indiana Fever at Mohegan Sun.

    v.fulkerson@theday.com

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