Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Angel Reese gets a fresh start and more WNBA notes

The Chicago Sky traded Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream for consecutive first-round picks in 2027 and 2028 which probably won’t be any good. Luckily for them, they’ve made moves and have assembled a respectable roster since, bringing in Azurá Stevens (who was with their 2021 title team), DiJonai Carrington, Skylar Diggins and Jacy Sheldon.

 

Imagine if they had been a competent organization in the previous two years, but better late than never, even if it comes after losing a star like Reese.

 

Landing with Dream means that she is going to a contending team, and she could be the piece to put them over the top. She’s the most prolific rebounder in WNBA history and is a big factor on defense. Reese’s efficiency numbers don’t jump off the page for last season (45.8), but her numbers are skewed by her poor start to the year before her massive turnaround. Consider how she had the highest assist average (3.7) on the team after Courtney Vandersloot’s right ACL tear, and the next best playmakers on the team were Ariel Atkins, who is decent, and Rachel Banham, who wouldn’t get many minutes on a contender.

 

Now Reese, who expanded her game last season by playing more on-ball, should see even more improvement in her playmaking next to the options like Rhyne Howard, Allisha Gray and Breonna Jones after almost doubling her average in her second year. The other area she could see enhanced is scoring as a roller. 

 

The rich get richer

 

The New York Liberty have made fine use of the new CBA money being spent in WNBA free agency by keeping the powerhouse that is Jonquel Jones next to Sabrina Ionescu (intends to re-sign) and two-time MVP Breanna Stewart, while signing Satou Sabally to be the fourth star.

 

Teams around the W are already scrambling to scheme up a way to deal with that much talent when they start playing heavy minutes in the playoffs. On top of that, strength is one of the biggest advantages a player could have, and the Liberty were not lacking it in Jones and Stewart, who can power down hill or finesse their way to the cup. Sabally adds another athletic, big and strong scorer.

 

The team’s complimentary shooters, and Ionescu will be in heaven because defenses primarily overload the lane at the expense of the arc.

 

Quick hits:

 

  • UConn’s Azzi Fudd went first in the Monday’s WNBA draft, and three members of UCLA’s championship team were taken in the top nine (Lauren Betts 4th to the Washington Mystics, Gabriela Jaquez 5th to the Chicago Sky and Angela Dugalić 9th also to the Mystics).

 

  • Dominique Malonga should be on everyone’s radar for the Most Improved Player award, even if she was last season’s second overall pick. Noelle Quinn, who was canned as coach after last season’s disappointment, and didn’t play Malonga nearly enough when she was an impactful defender against most matchups. Meanwhile, lesser talented rookies played more minutes on other teams. Things will be different under coach Sonia Raman.


Mateo’s Hoop Diary: The Heat’s frustrating season came to an end in the Play-In Tournament

The Heat were iced in overtime by the Hornets in Charlotte and sent to the draft lottery. They went most of the game without their captain, Bam Adebayo, thanks to LaMelo Ball cheaply and flagrantly taking him out by swiping his foot while he was off balance, causing him to fall hard on his tailbone. Yet they held on until the last seconds. 

 

Kel’el Ware and Davion Mitchell stepped up being inside and outside threats, and Andrew Wiggins did all the little things in the trenches while giving them a big-time scoring punch. They even had Wiggins at center, next to Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Pelle Larsson to maintain their speed, and they defended well without fouling plus didn’t get killed on 3-pointers. 

 

Jaquez started the second half for Adebayo, setting the mood with aggression. Additionally, Ware turned into Bill Russell for a spurt, rejecting shots into transition, and Mitchell was the source of offense in the fourth quarter. 

 

Their problems were containing second-chance scoring and dribble penetration from Ball, plus Coby White’s 3-point eruption. On top of that, they made a critical mistake late in the fourth quarter while up six points by doubling Ball, allowing Brandon Miller to nail a trifecta before White made a fallway shot in the corner to tie. 

 

The Hornets controlled the pace in overtime, exposed the corner and baseline and didn’t miss a shot in the lane late. But it was all drama: Herro made a fallaway corner triple and then caused Ball to foul him in the corner immediately on the next possession when the Heat got a steal. They took the lead by one, but Ball reclaimed it for Charlotte on a curling catch-and-go move, and then Mitchell got denied on a last second fastbreak attempt by Miles Bridges.

 

The Heat lost 127-126 after 17 ties and 16 lead changes. One would’ve presumed that it was going to turn into a blowout without Adebayo’s presence, but they went down with class. Their worst stretch of the game was getting outscored by eight in the third quarter.

 

The Hornets will now play the loser of Wednesday’s seven and eight game, and the Heat are left pondering their future. If this season proved anything, it’s that they need to get better on defense by being bigger, stronger and faster. 

 

Ware can be a top-level big man with more seasoning. The next step for him is sharper pick-and-roll defense, so he and Adebayo can be a potent duo. 

 

Mitchell resembled vintage Kyle Lowry in the loss, and he has always been a keeper, who should remain the starting point guard. The prerequisites for taking that spot are superior scoring without help and on-ball disruption. 

 

Some will depart, and the right youngsters will continue to develop; the team should continue to ride it out with them instead of trading for an All-Star who will have to do more with less. They’ll now also have their highest pick since either 2019 (13th) or 2017 (14th), at least, in what is expected to be a deep draft.

 

They need to realize that there is no quick fix into getting back into contention, unless Shaquille O’Neal, the Big Three or Jimmy Butler walk through the door.



Xander Zayas versus Jaron “Boots” Ennis is summer 2026’s biggest fight

The wheels for Xander Zayas versus Jaron “Boots” Ennis are set in motion, and the two are doing a fine job of hyping up the fight. Zayas’ WBA and WBO super welterweight titles are on the line in this legacy fight and it could be a bloodbath.

 

It’ll be at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, on June 27th, which means that half the crowd will be Puerto Rican and the other side will see a good turnout of Philadelphia supporters. 

 

The champion is the younger man at age 23, and Ennis will turn 29 the day before the fight. Naturally, this has caused speculation from fans and media that Ennis needs the fight more, and that it’s too much too early for Zayas. Yet, legendary champion Roy Jones Jr. doesn’t believe it for Zayas “ because he’s a two-time world champion.” Jones also added that losing to another opponent before this matchup would mess up his payday against Ennis.

 

Both of them have slick skills yet they take risks that leave themselves open like all exciting fighters, and neither has seen this level of quality, athletic opponent. Zayas has improved significantly after each contest, but eating a vicious overhand right like he did in round four against Slawa Sloper three fights ago would put him in grave danger. And if Ennis is defensively sloppy like he was in the second Karen Chukhadzhian clash he won fairly easily, then he’ll be in Davy Jones‘ locker.

 

Keep in mind that Zayas doesn’t have shotgun-blast power, but he breaks down opponents with volume, and the challenger is a violent finishing southpaw with rare switch-hitting ability.  

 

Ennis denies looking past Zayas, but it’s hard to feel differently as he said to Bryan Fonseca of The Mandatory that is just another fight for him and that every one that people speculate will be his toughest is his easiest. On another occasion, he said that Zayas took the fight for the money and that he has a large head he can’t miss.

 

Disagreements over not having a 55-45 split were revealed at the press conference on April 8 as both fighters jawed at each other, and Zayas pointed out that he is the champion, who didn’t need to take this match, and is giving Ennis an opportunity.   

 

When they faced off at the presser, Ennis rubbed the belts and was told that’s as close as he’d get to them. If he takes them, it be a significant achievement on his résumé and would elevate him closer towards the highest echelon of the sport.

 

There’s a surplus of great Puerto Rican champions which include Wilfredo Benítez, Félix Trinidad and Miguel Cotto. A win against Ennis would put Zayas on the path to becoming their next great one. 



Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Heat cruise to an easy victory in last game of the regular season

Thankfully, it’s almost over.

 

The Heat’s regular season finale was a tune-up against the Atlanta Hawks’ D-Team, in which Bam Adebayo had a scoring spree on drive-bys and jumpers. The rest of the team got their licks in, and they won an inconsequential game by 26 points despite sweating a bit in the second and third quarters because of Cory Kispert, of all people.  

 

The only weight it carried was an emotional one for the organization, being PA announcer Michael Baiamonte’s last game after 35 years. 

 

This was a season that saw them get pantsed by all the good teams and they ended the last six weeks posting the 24th ranked defense. On top of that, they get hosed, receiving a second-round pick for the “unprecedented” Terry Rozier situation, in which they traded a first-round pick for him in 2024, without the important information from the Charlotte Hornets that he was under federal and league probe.

 

Coach Erik Spoelstra said it was an unusual game, but was pleased with the team’s approach. Regarding the Play-In, he said, “It’s a Game 7. I just want our guys to take on that challenge and do whatever’s necessary.”

 

Now the Hornets in Charlotte await them for the nine and 10 Play-In game which sends the loser to the lottery. The winner of this matchup will advance to play the loser of the seven and eighth seeded game for the last playoff spot, and a chance to get mowed down by the Detroit Pistons.

 

The best thing that could happen, as has been explained in this Diary previously, is for Heat to lose on Wednesday so they can get the highest pick possible in the upcoming draft. They only have a 4.8 percent chance at landing in the top four and only one percent of getting the first pick. 

 

There is one small consolation: the Heat are not the most disappointing team in Florida because the Orlando Magic are also a Play-In Tournament squad. The Magic had sky-high expectations and their regular season was a disaster, concluding in Boston with a loss versus the background players. Injuries are not all the blame as they have been a team with poor basketball character and it might cost coach Jamahl Mosley his job.



Mateo’s Hoop Diary: The Heat failed to stop Brandon Ingram and got crushed in Toronto

Part two of the miniseries in Toronto didn’t get ugly until the second quarter and then it was worse than a direct-to-video sequel. Brandon Ingram mercilessly sprayed jumpers, plus Collin Murray-Bowles, who finished with a perfect seven-for-seven from field, out-hustled every Heatle to extend plays and blow up sets. 

 

Bam Adebayo was so frustrated he uncharacteristically shoved Jakob Poeltl after getting tangled up, and the Raptors’ lead soon swelled to 26 points in the third quarter. They subsequently loosened up, and the Heat sliced the deficit to six before the hosts got serious about waxing them again. 

 

Scottie Barnes created the snowball effect with a trifecta and a fastbreak layup and the visitors soon yielded. 

 

The Heat lost 128-114, but it felt wider than that. Coach Erik Spoelstra said, “I don’t have the answers right now. We are searching…” 

 

Adebayo did all he could, totaling 14 of 24 points in the lane with 11 rebounds and eight assists. And Davion Mitchell had a double-double (15 points, 11 assists), too, but their impact was nullified by Toronto’s activity in the lane and superior outside shooting. 

 

Still, for as bad it looked, the Heat have somehow logged 22 worse defensive ratings this season. It wasn’t their game plan on most nights, but rather not being able to match the other team’s talent. 

 

There’s no way coach Erik Spoelstra can have any hope of finding “a way to overcome” when every game lately has been a struggle. Perhaps this time after the team has been finished off will it make management wise up, finally going in a different route. 

 

When looking back on this year, the biggest positives will be the development of Pelle Larsson, Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Kasparas Jakučionis. The heaviest negatives will be not enough consistency from Kel’el Ware, the Tyler Herro and Norman Powell backcourt being a failure, and wasting a season of Adebayo’s prime. 



Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Another disappointing season for the Heat

The Heat knew the build was dead in 2001 when they got smacked around by the Charlotte Hornets and were sent packing early in round one. One wonders if management realizes that it should be no different this time. 

 

They were drawn and quartered in Toronto on Tuesday to start their miniseries with the Raptors and it’s hard to keep track of what number of humiliation this is for them. It wasn’t because they sealed their fates going into the Play-In Tournament for the fourth straight year, but because they look a class below most of the decent and above teams. 

 

It’s a good thing that they are likely headed to the ninth and 10th-seeded Play-In game, instead of the seventh and eighth they’ve been accustomed to. This way they have a chance of getting put out of their misery early since losing would send them to the lottery. 

 

That’s right. The Heat’s one percent chance of getting the first pick is exponentially better than surviving the Play-In to get smoked in round one.

 

It’s come to this. 

 

Poor coach Erik Spoelstra has kept up this charade when he knows deep down they can’t hang — and they know it, too. The team will probably be hopeless against the Raptors on Thursday, giving up at some point in the second half. 

 

It’s around these times that a team quits on the season. In this case, it’s more about abandoning the mission than turning their back on Spoelstra. 

 

Two games remain after Thursday’s: Friday in Washington against the Wizards and the home finale on Sunday versus the Atlanta Hawks, which will be the final regular season game of Michael Baiamonte, the Heat’s PA announcer’s, career. He’s given them 35 years of service. The team would win that game if life were like a movie, but the Hawks already embarrassed them on the 2006 championship commemoration night. They could easily do it again because they have been a top nine team over the last two months (27-13).

 

Perhaps the closing to this season will make management reflect on what they had 20 years ago, when Dwyane Wade went beast mode in the Finals, delivering their first championship. Having a player like that is the only way to win. A collection of very good players winning a title doesn’t happen, save for the 2004 Detroit Pistons, and that team had arguably the greatest defense of all time.

 

The Heat had a real go-to when Jimmy Butler was around, but they couldn’t put a good enough team around him. The way he overdelivered with less in three great playoff runs that included two finals trips broke the Heat’s thinking. They’ve brought back teams that should have expired, thinking their way will surprise the public, but it wasn’t that — it was Butler being one of the greatest playoff risers in NBA history. They reached the wrong conclusion about how smart they are like Jerry Jones did when the Cowboys won the Super Bowl in 1995 with Barry Switzer instead of Jimmy Johnson, who already had won two championships with them.

 

And now the Atlanta Hawks and Charlotte Hornets, two division rivals, have eclipsed them in potency and relevancy. The Hawks intelligently traded away an All-Star player (Trae Young) because they couldn’t win with his awful defense, which is something the Heat should have done with Tyler Herro since he is not that guy and next year is the last one on his contract. Plus the Hornets spent a long time in the cellar, something the Heat were never willing to do.

 

Nick Arison and the committee pride themselves on having an adaptable organization, but that is being put to the test. So far, they’ve been at the desk a while and are flunking.

 



Caroline Dubois schools Terri Harper, unifying lightweight titles

Caroline Dubois didn’t deliver on her promise to knock out Terri Harper, but she outclassed her and took her WBO belt, unifying the lightweight division with the WBC strap.

 

Not much landed for either in the first round, despite Dubois trying to get on the inside of Harper’s lead foot. Dubois then raised the intensity, connecting on multiple jabs and a body shot with a straight left hand.

 

Her focus was breaking her down with body strikes and the pressure neutralized Harper’s attack. Dubois managed to slip out of big ones, and later dropped her with a head shot on the tail end of a  2-1 and 1-2 combinations.

 

The bell rang quickly after, giving Harper a reprieve, but she entered the seventh round not willing to engage and paid for the shots she landed. There was an accidental head clash in the next interval that drew blood from Harper’s left eyebrow, and she got battered heading into the closing rounds.

 

Yet the continuous punishment finally forced her to let her hands go, turning the ninth and 10th rounds into a brawl with both ladies landing heartless punches up and downstairs.  Harper dished seven more power punches between those two rounds, per CompuBox.

 

Dubois won unanimously on the cards 98-91, 97-92, 98-91. She said in her post-fight interview that, “I’m an entertainer and this is what I do,” and that she only wants big fights in the future, with two more coming in 2026. 

 

The rest of Most Valuable Promotions’ fight card included Ellie Scotney defeating Mayelli Flores to become England’s youngest undisputed champion (junior flyweight); Chantelle Cameron won the vacant WBO junior middleweight belt over Michaela Kotaskova; Irma Garcia retained her IBF junior bantamweight title against Emma Dolan.

 

On top of that, Mikaela Mayer, the WBO’s welterweight champ who is also a unified titlist at 154 pounds (WBA + WBC) wants to be undisputed. She was working as one of the analysts on the broadcast, and she faced off with Cameron in the ring, setting up a fight for later this year. Mayer also had the junior middleweight belt before vacating it in January.



Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Heat make easy work of the touring Wizards

Nothing like playing a team in the cellar to boost the numbers.

 

It was the first meeting since Bam Adebayo’s 83-point outburst on March 10, and the Heat’s bench crew got the extra time in the tune-up win. They scored 142.1 points per 100 possessions, good enough for the 99th percentile, per Cleaning the Glass.

 

Still, the Wizards pressured Adebayo early, not wanting to allow a repeat or close to it of his career high. He said, “They did their jobs. I got six shot attempts.”

 

Tyler Herro was absent for personal reasons, so Simone Fontecchio started in his place, scoring eight points in 19 minutes. 

 

Jaime Jaquez Jr. set a season high of 32 points, slicing and pivoting through the lane. His best stretch was in the second quarter, helping the team separate themselves from the Wizards, making five of his 12 baskets. 

 

On top of that, the Heat missed all four 3-point attempts in the period and still scored 41 points on 68.2% shooting.

 

Kel’el Ware also made 10 shots in the restricted are and behind the 3-point line, with 19 rebounds and seven blocks. Coach Erik Spoelstra said, “I would say, we’ve had three practices in the last few days, I would venture to say these are the three best practices he’s had this year and those are coming out of some tough games with tough competition.”

   

They started the fourth quarter ahead by 31 points, and none of the starters had to come in. The team had shut off the paint for most of the game up to that point, while getting what they wanted.

 

Rookie Kasparas Jakučionis, who hadn’t played the last two games because of a coach’s decision, was one of four players to log all of the fourth-quarter minutes. Nikola Jović likely would have been the fifth, but he was fouled, catching a lob in mid-air with 36 seconds and came down hard on his left ankle. Jamir Watkins was given a flagrant foul penalty two, and Spoelstra later said that Jović’s ankle was sprained. Keep in mind that Jović had missed the last six games.

 

The Heat won 152-136, setting a new season high in points and it was one point shy of their all-time single game scoring record. The previous high (150) this season also came against Washington on March 10. 

 

The Heat are the 10th seed, with four games are left in the regular season: the next two are in Toronto against the Raptors, then Washington on April 10 and the finale on April 12, hosting the Atlanta Hawks.  





Mateo’s Hoop Diary: The Celtics outclassed the desperate Heat

The Celtics stained Pat Riley Court with an 18-point blowout. It was like watching a cyclist try to keep up with a Ferrari, only catching up within a mile when the driver pulled over for gas.

 

Jaylen Brown was unrestrainable as he sliced to the cup for layups and buried pull-up jumpers. The Celtics were shooting 75%, forcing coach Erik Spoelstra to call a timeout that did not help because the Heat kept bleeding, and surrendered 53 points before the first quarter ended. 

 

Spoelstra said, “This is going to sound crazy but this game was not like the other games. Our guys were locked in and competing. There was an exceptional level of shot-making from them to start the game.” 

 

It stayed ugly for the Heat as the Celtics kept pushing the pace, and they made nine shots in the lane. They had a 23-point lead at halftime with as many assists (18) as the Heat had field goals (18).

 

The Heat were powerless to stop Brown’s encore because he was too big, strong and fast for whoever challenged him. Still, they turned it around, subsequently draining 11 3-pointers, the most in any quarter of their season, in large part because the guests got comfortable, and cut the deficit to 10 points going into the fourth.  

 

They didn’t have much gas in the tank after that, and the Celtics pounced on them again. Jayson Tatum worked around screens for pull-up jumpers and dished to his cutting teammates, throwing cold water on the Heat’s comeback chances. He dissected the zone easily as well, while the Celtics kept separating themselves on the glass. 

 

The Heat lost 147-129.

 

Observations:

 

  • Norman Powell missed his third-straight game, yet the Heat’s offense scored in the 92nd percentile, so the problem is that they didn’t have the resources to hang with Boston’s attack or rebounding (48-37). There were moments the team overhelped, giving up treys, and no one was able to bother Brown and Tatum much on the dribble. Furthermore, the Heat only played six guys significant minutes because Spoelstra didn’t trust his reinforcements. Particularly, Kel’el Ware didn’t get much time because his screen-roll defense was weak and he bit on a fake.

 

  • Brown had 20 of his 43 points in the first quarter, the most by any Celtic player this season. Tatum also did some of the heavy lifting, setting up shooters and crashing the glass like a madman. He had a double-double (13 points, 12 rebounds) by halftime, then picked up his shot creation and finished with a triple-double (25 points, 18 rebounds and 11 assists) against two turnovers.

 

  • The Heat allowed the Celtics to shoot 29% higher than the league average in the paint non-restricted area. Notably, Brown didn’t miss in that spot, going 11-for-11, and Tatum made five of seven baskets.

 

  • Boston’s 53 points in the first quarter ties the most this season with the Heat ( against the Charlotte Hornets on Nov. 7). The Celtics made 11 3-pointers in that stretch, five of those belonging to Sam Hauser, who had 17 points in the period. Additionally, it was the third time the Celtics have scored at least 80 points in the first half.

 

  • Bam Adebayo, Jaime Jaquez and Pelle Larsson were the top options in the lane, combining for 14 of the team’s 19 field goals. The Heat also scored 45 points in the third quarter and it was their top shooting spurt of the season, yet they were outscored in every other period. 

 

  • The Heat are the 10th seed, being a half-game behind the Charlotte Hornets for the eighth seed, and 2.5 out of the sixth spot (Philadelphia 76ers). Regarding the Play-In Tournament, Adebayo said, “See if we can win all five and then figure out whatever happens after that. Take it one game at a time and whatever happens, happens, at this point.”



 

‘Vintage Sandy’ needed for Marlins to become playoff contenders

There were two signs over the offseason that proved the Miami Marlins front office believed in what they did in the first year of the latest rebuild and leaned into it going into 2026.

They signed a reliable closer in free agency and kept their ace.

Fresh off an Opening Day pitching performance that prompted infielder Connor Norby to call him “Vintage Sandy” in his postgame interview with the Marlins Radio Network, Sandy Alcantara tossed the first complete game shutout of the season, allowing only three hits with seven strikeouts to lead the Marlins to a 10-0 win over the Chicago White Sox on Wednesday.

“Sandy was really good,” White Sox manager Will Venable said. “I thought we came in with a good game plan, guys were engaged and were competitive. We just got beat by a really good pitcher and I think it’s as simple as that.”

It was Alcantara’s 13th career complete game and first since 2023. A lost art in modern-day pitching, Alcantara won the 2022 National League Cy Young Award for throwing six complete games.

“It’s been a long time since throwing a complete game but this one is special for me,” Alcantara said.

In his first two starts of the season, Alcantara has gone 16 innings without giving up an earned run, nor has he hit the 100-pitch benchmark in each of his starts. He has 12 total strikeouts and two walks while averaging 10.4 pitches per inning.

“We just didn’t have an answer for him. He had really good stuff. He pounded the zone, made it really tough on us to do anything,” Venable said, “just never had a chance.”

Alcantara hasn’t looked as good since his Cy Young season. Unfortunately, that didn’t yield a winning season from the Marlins, and by the time Miami was good enough to reach the postseason a year later, he was declining to the point of requiring Tommy John surgery.

By the time he returned in 2025, it was a completely different team. He still had his affable apprentice in Eury Perez alongside him to form one of the more formidable 1-2 pitching duos in the NL East.

His return to form coincides with the team’s rebirth under a newer, younger flourish. As the Marlins started the previous season with a bunch of unknowns who arrived via waiver claims, mixed with some who came in high-profile trades. He had a pre-All-Star break ERA of 7.22 in 18 starts and the Marlins were as low as 25-41 on June 11, 2025.

A switch was flipped on June 13 and since then, only four division winners have won more games than the Marlins: Milwaukee (64),

Seattle (60), Toronto (60), and Philadelphia (59). Alcantara posted a 3.33 ERA in his final 13 starts of the season as a clear sign of his comeback.

“It’s been well-documented a ton how much of a struggle it was early for him last year and most of the year,” Marlins manager Clayton McCullough said. “So for him, he just never gives in. He just keeps competing.”

Marlins president of Baseball Operations Peter Bendix resisted the urge to trade Alcantara on the final year of a 5-year, $56M extension (with a 2027 team option) knowing what was coming. He predicted on Opening Day that this was going to be Alcantara’s best season and so far he may be right.

The Marlins (5-1) have won both of their home series to start the 2026 season. Miami will travel to New York to take on the Yankees on Easter weekend for their first road trip of the year. They are going to need vintage Sandy all year if their playoff aspirations are to be realistic, and they know that.

“Hopefully I gotta keep healthy all season long and keep winning to take this team into the playoffs,” Alcantara said.